David Merritt
Rochester Institute of Technology
Rochester, NY, U.S.A.
http://www.rit.edu/~drmsps/
Miloš Milosavljević
Theoretical Astrophysics
California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/~milos/
Coalescence of binary supermassive black holes (SBHs) would constitute the strongest
sources of gravitational waves to be observed by LISA. While the formation of binary SBHs
during galaxy mergers is almost inevitable, coalescence requires that the separation between
binary components first drop by a few orders of magnitude, due presumably to interaction of the
binary with stars and gas in a galactic nucleus. This article reviews the observational evidence
for binary SBHs and discusses how they would evolve. No completely convincing case of a
bound, binary SBH has yet been found, although a handful of systems (e.g. interacting galaxies;
remnants of galaxy mergers) are now believed to contain two SBHs at projected separations of
.
-body studies of binary evolution in gas-free galaxies have reached large enough
particle numbers to reproduce the slow, “diffusive” refilling of the binary’s loss cone that is
believed to characterize binary evolution in real galactic nuclei. While some of the results of
these simulations - e.g. the binary hardening rate and eccentricity evolution - are strongly
-dependent, others - e.g. the “damage” inflicted by the binary on the nucleus - are not.
Luminous early-type galaxies often exhibit depleted cores with masses of
1-2 times the
mass of their nuclear SBHs, consistent with the predictions of the binary model. Studies of the
interaction of massive binaries with gas are still in their infancy, although much progress is
expected in the near future. Binary coalescence has a large influence on the spins of SBHs, even
for mass ratios as extreme as 10:1, and evidence of spin-flips may have been observed.
| http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2005-8 |
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