Mar 26–28, 2025
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
America/Toronto timezone

Relativistic Gas Accretion onto Supermassive Black Hole Binaries from Inspiral through Merger

Mar 27, 2025, 2:45 p.m.
15m
PI/4-405 - Bob Room (Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics)

PI/4-405 - Bob Room

Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

60
Contributed Talk

Speaker

Lorenzo Ennoggi (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Description

Accreting supermassive black hole binaries are powerful multimessenger sources emitting both gravitational and electromagnetic (EM) radiation. Understanding the accretion dynamics of these systems and predicting their distinctive EM signals is crucial to informing and guiding upcoming efforts aimed at detecting gravitational waves produced by these binaries. To this end, accurate numerical modeling is required to describe both the spacetime and the magnetized gas around the black holes. In this talk, I will outline two key advancements in this field of research.

On the one hand, I will present a novel 3D general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics (GRMHD) framework that combines multiple numerical codes to simulate the inspiral and merger of supermassive black hole binaries starting from realistic initial data and running all the way through merger. Throughout the evolution, we adopt a simple but functional prescription to account for gas cooling through the emission of photons.

On the other hand, I will present the application of our new computational method to following the time evolution of a circular, equal-mass, non-spinning black hole binary of total mass ${M}$ for ${\sim\!200}$ orbits starting from a separation of ${20\,r_g\equiv 20\,M}$ and reaching the post-merger evolutionary stage of the system. Our simulation has confirmed the predictions of previous works about the early inspiral phase, but has also revealed phenomena specific to the late-inspiral and merger so far undocumented in the literature. Perhaps our most striking finding is that, although the accretion rate onto the black holes is approximately constant from ${\sim\!3000\,M}$ before merger onward, the EM luminosity undergoes a sharp increase around the time of merger. This effect is caused by the sudden lack of binary torque, which allows the gas in the immediate vicinity of the remnant to quickly fall in, thus compressing and heating up as it shocks. Secondly, the magnetic flux brought to the ${\sim\!0.68\text{-spinning}}$ merger remnant is able to drive a relativistic, Poynting-flux-dominated jet.

These dynamics could lead to potentially observable EM signals, supporting upcoming multimessenger observational campaigns.

Presenter's Name Lorenzo Ennoggi
Presenter's Email Address [email protected]
Keywords Supermassive black hole mergers, Accretion, Relativistic jets, Computational methods
Recording Permission YES
Virtual Audience Permission YES
Photography Permission YES

Primary author

Lorenzo Ennoggi (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Co-authors

Manuela Campanelli (Rochester Institute of Technology) Yosef Zlochower (Rochester Institute of Technology) Julian Krolik (Johns Hopkins University) Scott Noble (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) Federico Cattorini (Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca) Jay Kalinani (Rochester Institute of Technology) Vassilios Mewes (Oak Ridge National Laboratory) Michail Chabanov (Rochester Institute of Technology) Liwei Ji (Rochester Institute of Technology) Maria Chiara de Simone (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Presentation materials

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External references