Published May 10, 2025 | Published
Journal Article Open

Coincident Multimessenger Bursts from Eccentric Supermassive Binary Black Holes

  • 1. ROR icon University of Arizona
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Supermassive binary black holes are a key target for the future Laser Interferometer Space Antenna and excellent multimessenger sources across the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. However, unique features of their EM emission that are needed to distinguish them from single supermassive black holes are still being established. Here, we conduct the first magnetohydrodynamic simulation of disk accretion onto equal-mass, nonspinning, eccentric binary black holes in full general relativity, incorporating synchrotron radiation transport through the dual jet in postprocessing. Focusing on a binary in the strong-field dynamical spacetime regime with eccentricity e = 0.3 as a point of principle, we show that the total accretion rate exhibits periodicity on the binary orbital period. We also show, for the first time, that this periodicity is reflected in the jet Poynting luminosity and the optically thin synchrotron emission from the jet base. Furthermore, we find a distinct EM signature for eccentric binaries: they spend more time in a low emission state (at apocenter) and less in a high state (at pericenter). Additionally, we find that the eccentric binary quasiperiodic gravitational-wave (GW) bursts are coincident with the bursts in Poynting luminosity and synchrotron emission. Finally, we discuss how multimessenger EM and GW observations of these systems can help probe plasma physics in their jet.

Copyright and License

© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

Acknowledgement

We thank Collin Christy for many useful discussions. This work was in part supported by NASA grant 80NSSC24K0771 and NSF grant PHY-2145421 to the University of Arizona. This research is part of the Frontera computing project at the Texas Advanced Computing Center. Frontera is made possible by U.S. National Science Foundation award OAC-1818253. This work used Stampede2 and Stamepede3 at the Texas Advanced Computing Center through allocation PHY190020 from the Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which is supported by U.S. National Science Foundation grants 2138259, 2138286, 2138307, 2137603, and 2138296 (T. J. Boerner et al. 2023).

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Created:
May 13, 2025
Modified:
May 13, 2025