Title: Gravitational Waves from Massive BlackHole Binaries
1Gravitational Waves from Massive Black-Hole
Binaries
NGC 6420
2Outline
- The black-hole - galaxy relations.
- Regulation of growth during quasar phase.
- The quasar luminosity function.
- Evolution of the BH mass function.
- Rate of gravity wave detection (LISA).
- The gravity wave back-ground.
- The occupation fraction of SMBHs in halos and GW
predictions.
3Black Hole - Galaxy Relations
Ferrarese (2002)
4The Black Hole-Bulge Relationship
- Quasar hosts at high z are smaller than at z0
(Croom et al. 2004).
5The Black Hole-Bulge Relationship
- Radio quiet QSOs conform to the Mbh-? with
little dependence on z (Shields et al. 2002).
6Model Quasar Luminosity Function
- One quasar episode per major merger.
- Accretion at Eddington Rate with median spectrum.
- Hypothesis Black-Hole growth is regulated by
feedback over the dynamical time. -
Three assumptions
This hypothesis provides a physical origin for
the Black-Hole mass scaling. The dynamical time
is identified as the quasar lifetime.
Wyithe Loeb (ApJ 2003)
7Model Quasar Luminosity Function.
- The black-hole -- dark matter halo mass relation
agrees with the evolution of clustering. - The galaxy dynamical time reproduces the correct
number of high redshift quasars.
clustering of quasars
Wyithe Loeb (ApJ 20032004)
8Properties of Massive BHs
- Ubiquitous in galaxies gt1011Msolar at z0.
- Tight relation between Mbh and ? (or vc, Mhalo).
- Little redshift evolution of Mbhf(?) to z3.
- Feedback limited growth describes the evolution
of quasars from z2-6. - Massive BHs (Mbhgt109Msolar) at zgt6.
- Is formation via seed BHs at high z or through
continuous formation triggered by gas cooling? - What is the expected GW signal?
9Evolution of Massive BHs
- Were the seeds of super-massive BHs the remnant
stellar mass BHs from an initial episode of metal
free star formation at z20?
10- The BH seeds move into larger halos through
hierachical merging.
11Evolution of Massive BHs
- Is super-massive BH formation ongoing and
triggered by gas cooling inside collapsing
dark-matter halos?
12BH Evolution Triggered by Gas Cooling
- Prior to reionization, cooling of gas inside
dark-matter halos is limited by the gas cooling
thresh-hold (104K for H). - Following reionization the infall of gas into
dark-matter halos is limited by the Jeans Mass. -
13- Reionization may affect BH formation in low mass
galaxies as it does star formation.
14Merging Massive BHs
- Satellite in a virialized halo sinks on a
timescale (Colpi et al. 1999) - Allow at most one coalescence per tsink.
- BBHs in some galaxies will converge within H-1
- Coalescence more rapid in triaxial galaxies.
- Brownian motion of a binary black hole results in
a more rapid coalescence. - We parameterise the hard binary coalescence
efficiency by ?mrg.
15LISA GW Event Rate (hcgt10-22 at fc10-3Hz)
- An event requires the satellite galaxy to sink,
rapid evolution through hard binary stage, and a
detectable GW signal.
16Number counts resulting from BH seeds
17Number counts resulting from continuous BH
formation
18Characteristic Strain Spectrum
- hspeclt10-14 (current)
- hspeclt10-15.5 (PPTA)
Jenet et al. (2006)
19- hspec is Sensitive to the Mbh-vc Relation
Ferrarese (2002) ?010-5.0 ?5.5
WL (2002) ?010-5.4 ?5.0
20Massive Black-Holes at low z Dominate GW Back
Ground
Sesna et al. (2004)
21Black-Hole Mass-Function
- The halo mass-function over predicts the density
of local SMBHs. - Most GWBG power comes from zlt1-2.
22Model Over-Predicts Low-z Quasar Counts at High
Luminosities
23Galaxy Occupation Fraction
- The occupation fraction is the galaxy LF / halo
MF - Assume 1 BH/galaxy
24Reduced GW Background
- Inclusion of the occupation fraction lowers the
predicted GW background by 2 orders of magnitude.
25Conclusions
- The most optimistic limits on the spectrum of
strain of the GW back-ground are close to
expected values. Tighter limits or detection of
the back-ground may limit the fraction of binary
BHs. - Allowance should be made for the occupation of
SMBHs in halos, which lower estimates of the GW
background based on the halo mass function by 2
orders of magnitude. - Models are very uncertain! PTAs will probe the
evolution of the most massive SMBHs at low z.
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30Limits on the GW Back-Ground
- Pulsar Timing arrays limit the energy density in
GW. - ?gwh2lt2x10-9
(Lommen 2002)
31Minimum Halo Mass for Star formation
- Atomic hydrogen cooling provides the mechanism
for energy loss that allows collapse to high
densities. - This yields a minimum mass in a neutral IGM.
32Minimum Halo Mass for Baryonic Collapse
- Assume gas settles into hydrostatic equilibrium
after collapse into a DM halo from an
adiabatically expanding IGM. - This yields a minimum mass in an ionized IGM.
33Minimum Halo Mass for Baryonic Collapse
- A minimum mass is also seen in simulations. The
minimum mass is reduced at high redshift.
(Dijkstra et al. 2004)
34Median Quasar Spectral Energy Distribution
Elvis et al. (1994) Haiman Loeb (1999)
- The median SED can be used to compute number
counts. - The SED can also be used to convert low
luminosity X-ray quasar densities to low
luminosity optical densities.
35Binary BH Detection by LISA
104
36Black-holes at high z accrete near their
Eddington Rate
37A BBH in a pair of Merging Galaxies (NGC 6420
Komossa et al. 2003)
38Gravitational Waves from BBHs
- The observable is a strain amplitude
- In-spiral due to gravitational radiation.
39Merger Rates for DM Halos
Time
Large M
Small M
Lacey Cole (1993)
40The Press-Schechter Mass Function
Z0
Z30
41- Reionization may affect BH formation in low mass
galaxies as it does starformation.
42Binary Evolution Timescales (Yu 2002)
- BBHs in some galaxies will converge within H-1
- Coalescence more rapid in triaxial galaxies.
- Residual massive BH binaries have Pgt20yrs and
agt0.01pc.
43Merging Massive BHs
- Satellite in a virialized halo sinks on a
timescale (Colpi et al. 1999) - Allow at most one coalescence during the decay
plus coalescence times.
44Reduced Event Rate
- Inclusion of the occupation fraction lowers the
predicted event rate by an order of magnitude.