Galaxy Tomography with the Gravitational Wave Background from Supermassive Black Hole Binaries
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Yifan Chen
Matthias Daniel
Daniel J. D'Orazio
Andrea Mitridate
Laura Sagunski
Xiao Xue
Gabriella Agazie
Jeremy G. Baier
Paul T. Baker
Bence Bécsy
Laura Blecha
Adam Brazier
Paul R. Brook
Sarah Burke-Spolaor
Rand Burnette
J. Andrew Casey-Clyde
Maria Charisi
Shami Chatterjee
Tyler Cohen
James M. Cordes
Neil J. Cornish
Fronefield Crawford
H. Thankful Cromartie
Megan E. Decesar
Paul B. Demorest
Heling Deng
Lankeswar Dey
Timothy Dolch
Elizabeth C. Ferrara
William Fiore
Emmanuel Fonseca
Gabriel E. Freedman
Emiko C. Gardiner
Kyle A. Gersbach
Joseph Glaser
Deborah C. Good
Kayhan Gültekin
Jeffrey S. Hazboun
Ross J. Jennings
Aaron D. Johnson
David L. Kaplan
Luke Zoltan Kelley
Joey S. Key
Nima Laal
Michael T. Lam
William G. Lamb
Bjorn Larsen
T. Joseph W. Lazio
Natalia Lewandowska
Tingting Liu
Jing Luo
Ryan S. Lynch
Chung-Pei Ma
Dustin R. Madison
Alexander McEwen
James W. McKee
Maura A. McLaughlin
Patrick M. Meyers
Chiara M. F. Mingarelli
David J. Nice
Stella Koch Ocker
Ken D. Olum
Timothy T. Pennucci
Polina Petrov
Nihan S. Pol
Henri A. Radovan
Scott M. Ransom
Paul S. Ray
Joseph D. Romano
Jessie C. Runnoe
Alexander Saffer
Shashwat C. Sardesai
Kai Schmitz
Xavier Siemens
Joseph Simon
Magdalena S. Siwek
Sophia v. Sosa Fiscella
Ingrid H. Stairs
Daniel R. Stinebring
Abhimanyu Susobhanan
Joseph K. Swiggum
Jacob Taylor
Stephen R. Taylor
Jacob E. Turner
Caner Unal
Michele Vallisneri
Rutger Van Haasteren
Joris Verbiest
Sarah J. Vigeland
Caitlin A. Witt
David Wright
Olivia Young
Abstract
The detection of a stochastic gravitational wave background by pulsar timing arrays suggests the presence of a supermassive black hole binary population. Although the observed spectrum generally aligns with predictions from orbital evolution driven by gravitational wave emission in circular orbits, there is a discernible preference for a turnover at the lowest observed frequencies. This turnover could indicate a significant hardening phase, transitioning from early environmental influences to later stages predominantly influenced by gravitational wave emission. In the vicinity of these binaries, the ejection of stars or dark matter particles through gravitational three-body slingshots efficiently extracts orbital energy, leading to a low-frequency turnover in the spectrum. By analyzing the NANOGrav 15-year data, we assess how the gravitational wave spectrum depends on the initial inner galactic profile prior to disruption by binary ejections, accounting for a range of initial binary eccentricities. Our findings suggest a parsec-scale galactic center density around $10textasciicircum6,M_odot/textrmpctextasciicircum3$ across most of the parameter space, offering insights into the environmental effects on black hole evolution and combined matter density near galaxy centers.
Type
Publication
arXiv e-prints