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Published January 1, 2008 | Published
Journal Article Open

An eccentric circumbinary accretion disk and the detection of binary massive black holes

Abstract

We present a two-dimensional grid-based hydrodynamic simulation of a thin, viscous, locally isothermal corotating disk orbiting an equal-mass Newtonian binary point mass on a fixed circular orbit. We study the structure of the disk after multiple viscous times. The binary maintains a central hole in the viscously relaxed disk with radius equal to about twice the binary semimajor axis. Disk surface density within the hole is reduced by orders of magnitude relative to the density in the disk bulk. The inner truncation of the disk resembles the clearing of a gap in a protoplanetary disk. An initially circular disk becomes elliptical and then eccentric. Disturbances in the disk contain a component that is stationary in the rotating frame in which the binary is at rest; this component is a two-armed spiral density wave. We measure the distribution of the binary torque in the disk and find that the strongest positive torque is exerted inside the central low-density hole. We make connection with the linear theory of disk forcing at outer Lindblad resonances (OLRs) and find that the measured torque density distribution is consistent with forcing at the 3:2 (m = 2) OLR, well within the central hole. We also measure the time dependence of the rate at which gas accretes across the hole and find quasi-periodic structure. We discuss implications for variability and detection of active galactic nuclei containing a binary massive black hole.

Additional Information

© 2008 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2006 July 19; accepted 2007 September 8. Print publication: Issue 1 (2008 January 1). We would like to thank Steve Lubow for comments that have helped improve our understanding of the mechanics of binary-disk coupling in the simulation. We would also like to thank Tamara Bogdanovic´ for comments and Phil Armitage, Mitch Begelman, Roger Blandford, Paolo Coppi, Peter Goldreich, Jim Gunn, Margaret Pan, Sterl Phinney, Roman Rafikov, and Mateusz Ruszkowski for helpful conversations. We would also like to thank Michael Turk for his help during an early phase of the project. A. I. M. acknowledges support from a Keck fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study. M. M. acknowledges support by NASA through the Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF- 01188.01-A awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., for NASA under contract NAS 5-26555. The software used in this work was in part developed by the DOE-supported ASC/Alliance Center for Astrophysical Thermonuclear Flashes at the University of Chicago. The simulations presented in this work were performed with the Scheides cluster at the Institute for Advanced Study. M. M. thanks the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics for hospitality during the completion of this work. This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grant PHY 99-07949.

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