posted on 2019-08-20, 13:50authored byRebecca G. Martin, Chris Nixon, Fu-Guo Xie, Andrew King
A circumbinary disc around a pair of merging stellar-mass black holes may be shocked and heated during the recoil of the merged hole, causing a near-simultaneous electromagnetic counterpart to the gravitational wave event. The shocks occur around the recoil radius, where the disc orbital velocity is equal to the recoil velocity. The amount of mass present near this radius at the time of the merger is critical in determining how much radiation is released. We explore the evolution of a circumbinary disc in two limits. First, we consider an accretion disc that feels no torque from the binary. The disc does not survive until the merger unless there is a dead zone, a region of low turbulence. Even with the dead zone, the surface density in this case may be small. Secondly, we consider a disc that feels a strong binary torque that prevents accretion on to the binary. In this case there is significantly more mass in regions of interest at the time of the merger. A dead zone in this disc increases the mass close to the recoil radius. For typical binary-disc parameters we expect accretion to be significantly slowed by the resonant torque from the binary, and for a dead zone to be present. We conclude that provided significant mass orbits the binary after the formation of the black hole binary and that the radiation produced in recoil shocks can escape the flow efficiently, there is likely to be an observable electromagnetic signal from black hole binary mergers.
Funding
RGM acknowledges the hospitality of Leicester University during a visit where parts of this work were completed. RGM acknowledges support from NASA through grant NNX17AB96G. CN is supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (grant number ST/M005917/1). FGX is supported in part by National Program on Key Research and Development Project of China (grant number 2016YFA0400804), the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of CAS (grant number 2016243), and the Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai (grant number 17ZR1435800). The Theoretical Astrophysics Group at the University of Leicester is supported by an STFC Consolidated Grant.
History
Citation
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2018, 480 (4), pp. 4732-4737 (6)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP), Royal Astronomical Society