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Office of Public Affairs
Yale University

CONTACT:
Jacqueline Weaver, 203-432-8555 #166

Embargoed for Release: 10:30 a.m. EST, May 26, 2003

Astrophysicists Predict Rapid Merging of Black Holes in Colliding Galaxies

New Haven, Conn. -- A group of astrophysicists at Yale has calculated the fate 
of a pair of supermassive black holes at the center of a galaxy, showing that 
they spiral inward and coalesce quickly when a large amount of gas is present.

The work presented today at the American Astronomical Society meeting in 
Nashville, Tenn. consists of a series of numerical simulations of an orbiting 
pair of black holes embedded in a massive gas cloud. Such gas clouds are often 
observed at the centers of ultraluminous infrared galaxies, objects that are 
interpreted as mergers in progress.

Doctoral student Andres Escala of Yale and the Universidad de Chile performed 
the study under the supervision of Paolo Coppi and Richard Larson, professors of 
astronomy at Yale.

Supermassive black holes are a common phenomenon in the universe since nearly 
every large galaxy has one at its center. Large galaxies are believed to form 
through a series of mergers of smaller galaxies, many of which may have 
contained their own central black holes. It is important to understand, said 
Escala, whether these central supermassive black holes merge when the galaxies 
merge. In the merger scenario, this is presumed to happen because most large 
galaxies contain a single central supermassive black hole.

"Our work explores this question and suggests that, in a merger of galaxies 
containing a reasonable amount of gas, the answer is yes and the central 
supermassive black holes coalesce shortly after the galaxies merge," Escala said.

"The orbiting black holes are predicted to spiral together and sink toward the 
center because of the gravitational drag effect produced by the gas, which tries 
to follow the motion of the black holes but always lags behind," said Larson.

The simulations show that the black holes spiral inward and form a massive close 
binary system at the center of the galaxy. Once the binary has formed, it 
creates an ellipsoidal enhancement in the density of the surrounding gaseous 
medium that trails behind the binary. "The decelerating torque exerted by this 
trailing ellipsoidal enhancement makes the black holes continue to approach each 
other," Coppi said.

This result differs considerably from that obtained when the background is made 
entirely of stars instead of gas because the binary then acts as a baseball bat 
that knocks out all the stars that pass too close to it. "The ejection of the 
stars produces a hole in the surroundings of the binary, causing the coalescence 
to stall when the binary is formed," Coppi said. In the new simulations with 
gas, however, the gas is not ejected but remains concentrated near the black holes.

Because of this gas and its drag, the rapidly orbiting black holes come close 
enough that gravitational radiation becomes important and eventually causes 
their final coalescence. "This final coalescence of the black holes will produce 
a burst of gravitational waves that will be observable out to a great distance," 
said Escala. "Such bursts will be detectable with LISA, the National Aeronautics 
and Space Administration's space laser interferometer that is expected to be 
launched in 2010."

The detection of such gravitational waves would be a major test of Einstein's 
theory of general relativity, and it would also provide direct evidence for the 
predicted merging of supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei.

This work was supported by the Andes Foundation under the Yale-Universidad de 
Chile Collaborative Program and by the Chilean FONDAP project 15010003.

# # #

EDITORS: Photos and a movie to illustrate this release can be obtained over the 
Internet after 4:30 P.M. EST, May 26, 2003 at
      http://phoenix.astro.yale.edu/coppi/bhmerge/

