Litcius/Paper detail

Gravitational self-lensing in populations of massive black hole binaries

Luke Zoltan Kelley, Daniel J. D’Orazio, R. Di Stefano

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT The community may be on the verge of detecting low-frequency gravitational waves from massive black hole binaries (MBHBs), but no examples of binary active galactic nuclei (AGN) have been confirmed. Because MBHBs are intrinsically rare, the most promising detection methods utilize photometric data from all-sky surveys. Gravitational self-lensing has recently been proposed as a method of detecting AGN in close separation binaries. In this study, we calculate the detectability of lensing signatures in realistic populations of simulated MBHBs. Within our model assumptions, we find that VRO’s LSST should be able to detect tens to hundreds of self-lensing binaries, with the rate uncertainty depending primarily on the orientation of AGN discs relative to their binary orbits. Roughly a quarter of lensing detectable systems should also show detectable Doppler boosting signatures. If AGN discs tend to be aligned with the orbit, lensing signatures are very nearly achromatic, while in misaligned configurations, the bluer optical bands are lensed more than redder ones. Whether substantial obscuring material (e.g. a dusty torus) will be present in close binaries remains uncertain, but our estimates suggest that a substantial fraction of systems would still be observable in this case.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsGravitational lensAstronomyStrong gravitational lensingSkyObservableBlack hole (networking)Gravitational waveBinary numberGalaxyRedshiftLink-state routing protocolComputer scienceMathematicsComputer networkRouting (electronic design automation)Quantum mechanicsArithmeticRouting protocolAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchGamma-ray bursts and supernovae