Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band

We assess the effects of supermassive black hole (SMBH) environments on the gravitational wave (GW) signal from binary SMBHs. To date, searches with pulsar timing arrays for GWs from binary SMBHs, in the frequency band ∼1–100 nHz, include the assumptions that all binaries are circular and evolve onl...

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Main Authors: Ravi, V., Wyithe, J., Shannon, Ryan, Hobbs, G., Manchester, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34866
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author Ravi, V.
Wyithe, J.
Shannon, Ryan
Hobbs, G.
Manchester, R.
author_facet Ravi, V.
Wyithe, J.
Shannon, Ryan
Hobbs, G.
Manchester, R.
author_sort Ravi, V.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We assess the effects of supermassive black hole (SMBH) environments on the gravitational wave (GW) signal from binary SMBHs. To date, searches with pulsar timing arrays for GWs from binary SMBHs, in the frequency band ∼1–100 nHz, include the assumptions that all binaries are circular and evolve only through GW emission. However, dynamical studies have shown that the only way that binary SMBH orbits can decay to separations where GW emission dominates the evolution is through interactions with their environments. We augment an existing galaxy and SMBH formation and evolution model with calculations of binary SMBH evolution in stellar environments, accounting for non-zero binary eccentricities. We find that coupling between binaries and their environments causes the expected GW spectral energy distribution to be reduced with respect to the standard assumption of circular, GW-driven binaries, for frequencies up to ∼20 nHz. Larger eccentricities at binary formation further reduce the signal in this regime. We also find that GW bursts from individual eccentric binary SMBHs are unlikely to be detectable with current pulsar timing arrays. The uncertainties in these predictions are large, owing to observational uncertainty in SMBH–galaxy scaling relations and the galaxy stellar mass function, uncertainty in the nature of binary–environment coupling and uncertainty in the numbers of the most massive binary SMBHs. We conclude, however, that low-frequency GWs from binary SMBHs may be more difficult to detect with pulsar timing arrays than currently thought.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-348662017-09-13T15:26:00Z Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band Ravi, V. Wyithe, J. Shannon, Ryan Hobbs, G. Manchester, R. We assess the effects of supermassive black hole (SMBH) environments on the gravitational wave (GW) signal from binary SMBHs. To date, searches with pulsar timing arrays for GWs from binary SMBHs, in the frequency band ∼1–100 nHz, include the assumptions that all binaries are circular and evolve only through GW emission. However, dynamical studies have shown that the only way that binary SMBH orbits can decay to separations where GW emission dominates the evolution is through interactions with their environments. We augment an existing galaxy and SMBH formation and evolution model with calculations of binary SMBH evolution in stellar environments, accounting for non-zero binary eccentricities. We find that coupling between binaries and their environments causes the expected GW spectral energy distribution to be reduced with respect to the standard assumption of circular, GW-driven binaries, for frequencies up to ∼20 nHz. Larger eccentricities at binary formation further reduce the signal in this regime. We also find that GW bursts from individual eccentric binary SMBHs are unlikely to be detectable with current pulsar timing arrays. The uncertainties in these predictions are large, owing to observational uncertainty in SMBH–galaxy scaling relations and the galaxy stellar mass function, uncertainty in the nature of binary–environment coupling and uncertainty in the numbers of the most massive binary SMBHs. We conclude, however, that low-frequency GWs from binary SMBHs may be more difficult to detect with pulsar timing arrays than currently thought. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34866 10.1093/mnras/stu779 unknown
spellingShingle Ravi, V.
Wyithe, J.
Shannon, Ryan
Hobbs, G.
Manchester, R.
Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title_full Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title_fullStr Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title_full_unstemmed Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title_short Binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
title_sort binary supermassive black hole environments diminish the gravitational wave signal in the pulsar timing band
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34866