In many astrophysical situations, as in the coalescence of supermassive black
hole pairs at gas rich galactic nuclei, the dynamical friction experienced by
an object is a combination of its own wake as well as the wakes of its
companions. Using a semi-analytic approach, we investigate the composite wake
due to, and the resulting drag forces on, double perturbers that are placed at
the opposite sides of the orbital center and move on a circular orbit in a
uniform gaseous medium. The circular orbit makes the wake of each perturber
asymmetric, creating an overdense tail at the trailing side. The tail not only
drags the perturber backward but it also exerts a positive torque on the
companion. For equal-mass perturbers, the positive torque created by the
companion wake is, on average, a fraction ~40-50% of the negative torque
created by its own wake, but this fraction may be even larger for perturbers
moving subsonically. This suggests that the orbital decay of a perturber in a
double system, especially in the subsonic regime, can take considerably longer
than in isolation. We provide the fitting formulae for the forces due to the
companion wake and discuss our results in light of recent numerical simulations
for mergers of binary black holes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ