Milton Ruiz, Antonios Tsokaros, and Stuart L. Shapiro,
Date: 17 Feb 2023 arXiv:2302.09083
Abstract
We perform general relativistic simulations of magnetized, accreting disks onto spinning black hole binaries with mass ratio~$q\equiv M_{\rm 1,irr}/M_{\rm 2,irr} = 1$, $2$ and $4$. The magnitude of the individual dimensionless black hole spins are all~$\chi= 0.26$ and lie either along the initial orbital plane or $45^\circ$ above it. We evolve these systems throughout the late inspiral, merger and postmerger phases to identify the impact of the black hole spins and the binary mass ratio on any jet and their electromagnetic (Poynting) signatures. %\ant{These initial simulations are exploratory in nature and simplified accordingly}. We find that incipient jets are launched from both black holes regardless of the binary mass ratio and along the spin directions as long as the force-free parameter $B^2/(8\,\pi\rho_0)$ in the funnel and above their poles is larger than one. At large distances the two jets merge into a single one. This effect \ant{may prevent} the electromagnetic detection of individual jets. As the accretion rate reaches a quasistationary state during the late predecoupling phase, we observe a sudden amplification of the outgoing Poynting luminosity that depends on the binary mass ratio. Following merger, the sudden change in the direction of the spin of the black hole remnant with respect to the spins of its progenitors causes a reorientation of the jet. The remnant jet drives a single, high-velocity, outward narrow beam collimated by a tightly wound, helical magnetic field which, in turn, boosts the Poynting luminosity. This effect is nearly mass-ratio independent. During this process, a kink is produced in the magnetic field lines, confining the jet. The kink propagates along the jet but rapidly decays, leaving no memory of the spin-shift. These results suggest that the merger of misaligned, low-spinning, black hole binary mergers in low-mass disks do not necessarily provide a viable scenario to explain X-shaped radio galaxies if other features are not taken into account. However, the sudden changes in the outgoing luminosity at merger may help to identify mergers of black holes in active galactic nuclei, shedding light on black hole growth mechanisms and the observed co-evolution of their host galaxies.
Nawaf Aldrees, Jonah Doppelt, Mit Kotak, Milton Ruiz, Stuart L. Shapiro, Antonios Tsokaros, and Eric Yu