Published October 21, 2024 | Submitted v2
Discussion Paper Open

Dual Jet Interaction, Magnetically Arrested Flows, and Flares in Accreting Binary Black Holes

  • 1. ROR icon Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics
  • 2. Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
  • 3. ROR icon University of Guelph
  • 4. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Supermassive binary black holes in galactic centers are potential multimessenger sources in gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiation. To find such objects, isolating unique electromagnetic signatures of their accretion flow is key. With the aid of three-dimensional general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations that utilize an approximate, semi-analytic, super-imposed spacetime metric, we identify two such signatures for merging binaries. Both involve magnetic reconnection and are analogous to plasma processes observed in the solar corona. The first, like colliding flux tubes that can cause solar flares, involves colliding jets that form an extended reconnection layer, dissipating magnetic energy and causing the two jets to merge. The second, akin to coronal mass ejection events, involves the accretion of magnetic field lines onto both black holes; these magnetic fields then twist, inflate, and form a trailing current sheet, ultimately reconnecting and driving a hot outflow. We provide estimates for the associated electromagnetic emission for both processes, showing that they likely accelerate electrons to high energies and are promising candidates for continuous, stochastic, and/or quasi-periodic higher energy electromagnetic emission. We also show that the accretion flows around each black hole can display features associated with the magnetically arrested state. However, simulations with black hole spins misaligned with the orbital plane and simulations with larger Bondi radii saturate at lower values of horizon-penetrating magnetic flux than standard magnetically arrested disks, leading to weaker, intermittent jets due to feedback from the weak jets or equatorial flux tubes ejected by reconnecting field lines near the horizon.

Acknowledgement

We thank A.A. Philippov, E.M. Gutierrez, and J.S. Heyl for useful discussions. We acknowledge the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), [funding reference number 568580]. L.C. is supported in part by Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Research at Perimeter Institute is supported in part by the Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada and by the Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Colleges and Universities. ERM acknowledges partial support by the National Science Foundation under grants No. PHY-2309210 and AST-2307394. B.R. is supported by the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Canadian Space Agency (23JWGO2A01), and by a grant from the Simons Foundation (MP-SCMPS-00001470). B.R. acknowledges a guest researcher position at the Flatiron Institute, supported by the Simons Foundation. E.R.M. gratefully acknowledges the hospitality of the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation grant PHY-2210452. The computational resources and services used in this work were partially provided by facilities supported by the VSC (Flemish Supercomputer Center), funded by the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) and the Flemish Government – department EWI and by Compute Ontario and the Digital Research Alliance of Canada (alliancecan.ca).

Software References

Athena++ (White et al. 2016; Stone et al. 2020), CBwaves (Csizmadia et al. 2012), matplotlib (Hunter 2007),

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Additional details

Created:
January 6, 2025
Modified:
January 6, 2025