Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS April Meeting
Wednesday–Saturday, April 3–6, 2024; Sacramento & Virtual
Session B05: Physics of Black Holes
10:45 AM–12:21 PM,
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
SAFE Credit Union Convention Center
Room: Ballroom A7, Floor 2
Sponsoring
Unit:
DGRAV
Chair: Chloe Richards, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Abstract: B05.00001 : General Relativistic Simulations of Gas Accretion onto Merging Supermassive Black Hole Binaries*
10:45 AM–10:57 AM
Presenter:
Lorenzo Ennoggi
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Authors:
Lorenzo Ennoggi
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Manuela Campanelli
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Jay V Kalinani
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Yosef Zlochower
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Vassilios Mewes
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Liwei Ji
(Rochester Institute of Technology)
Maria Chiara de Simone
(Università degli Studi di Milano Bicocca)
Scott C Noble
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
In this talk, I will discuss a novel way to overcome the above limitations. First, the SphericalNR code is used to run a CBD simulation on a uniform grid with curvilinear coordinates until the accretion rate onto the binary becomes stable and turbulence settles in. Then, MHD fields are interpolated onto a Cartesian grid, and the resulting system is evolved down to merger using the IllinoisGRMHD code. Finally, shortly after merger, all the spacetime and MHD fields are interpolated onto a uniform grid with curvilinear coordinates, and the evolution proceeds once again with SphericalNR. A simple radiation cooling model is applied in all of the three stages of the simulation process.
I will present the first set of comprehensive inspiral-merger-postmerger simulations of equal-mass SMBBHs, focusing on the effects of black hole spin on the structure and dynamics of the minidisks and jets. Minidisks survive until close to merger, with the survival time depending on the size and direction of the spins. Two very energetic jets are formed, each one powered by a minidisk; this is especially evident if the spins are aligned with the orbital angular momentum. As the minidisks disappear, the jets are quenched and eventually switched off; a single jet is then generated shortly after merger. I will present both a qualitative and a quantitative analysis of the simulations, comparing the accretion rate, enclosed mass, and Poynting flux profiles at different locations and for different spin setups and discussing a few other relevant diagnostics. In summary, SMBBH systems are found to yield potentially observable EM signals.
*We acknowledge support from NSF awards AST-2009330, OAC-2031744, PHY-1806596, and PHY-2110352, and from NASA TCAN awards NNH17ZDA001N and 80NSSC24K0100. Computational resources were provided by TACC's Frontera supercomputer through allocations PHY-20010 and AST-20021. Additional resources were provided by RIT's BlueSky, Green Prairies, and Lagoon clusters, acquired with NSF grants PHY-2018420, PHY-0722703, PHY-1229173 and PHY-1726215.
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