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Imprints of recoiling massive black holes on the hot gas of early-type galaxies
Devecchi, B.; Rasia, E.; Dotti, M.; Volonteri, M.; Colpi, M.
2009-04-01
Citation:Devecchi, B.; Rasia, E.; Dotti, M.; Volonteri, M.; Colpi, M. (2009). "Imprints of recoiling massive black holes on the hot gas of early-type galaxies." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 394(2): 633-640. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/75758>
Abstract: Anisotropic gravitational radiation from a coalescing black hole (BH) binary is known to impart recoil velocities of up to ∼1000 km s −1 to the remnant BH. In this context, we study the motion of a recoiling BH inside a galaxy modelled as a Hernquist sphere, and the signature that the hole imprints on the hot gas, using N -body/smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations. Ejection of the BH results in a sudden expansion of the gas ending with the formation of a gaseous core, similarly to what is seen for the stars. A cometary tail of particles bound to the BH is initially released along its trail. As the BH moves on a return orbit, a nearly spherical swarm of hot gaseous particles forms at every apocentre: this feature can live up to ≈10 8 years. If the recoil velocity exceeds the sound speed initially, the BH shocks the gas in the form of a Mach cone in density near each supersonic pericentric passage. We find that the X-ray fingerprint of a recoiling BH can be detected in Chandra X-ray maps out to a distance of Virgo. For exceptionally massive BHs, the Mach cone and the wakes can be observed out to a few hundred of milliparsec. The detection of the Mach cone is of twofold importance as it can be a probe of high-velocity recoils, and an assessment of the scatter of the M BH − M bulge relation at large BH masses.