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Dynamical Friction Modeling of Massive Black Holes in Cosmological Simulations and Effects on Merger Rate Predictions

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arxiv 2104.00021 v2 pith:QJ4Q6Q5J submitted 2021-03-31 astro-ph.GA

Dynamical Friction Modeling of Massive Black Holes in Cosmological Simulations and Effects on Merger Rate Predictions

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords blackholedynamicalholesparticlessimulationscollisionlesscosmological
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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In this work we establish and test methods for implementing dynamical friction for massive black hole pairs that form in large volume cosmological hydrodynamical simulations which include galaxy formation and black hole growth. We verify our models and parameters both for individual black hole dynamics and for the black hole population in cosmological volumes. Using our model of dynamical friction (DF) from collisionless particles, black holes can effectively sink close to the galaxy center, provided that the black hole's dynamical mass is at least twice that of the lowest mass resolution particles in the simulation. Gas drag also plays a role in assisting the black holes' orbital decay, but it is typically less effective than that from collisionless particles, especially after the first billion years of the black hole's evolution. DF from gas becomes less than $1\%$ of DF from collisionless particles for BH masses $> 10^{7}$ M$_{\odot}$. Using our best DF model, we calculate the merger rate down to $z=1.1$ using an $L_{\rm box}=35$ Mpc$/h$ simulation box. We predict $\sim 2$ mergers per year for $z>1.1$ peaking at $z\sim 2$. These merger rates are within the range obtained in previous work using similar-resolution hydro-dynamical simulations. We show that the rate is enhanced by factor of $\sim 2$ when DF is taken into account in the simulations compared to the no-DF run. This is due to $>40\%$ more black holes reaching the center of their host halo when DF is added.

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  1. Tracing black hole and galaxy growth across environments since cosmic noon

    astro-ph.GA 2026-07 accept novelty 6.5

    Central black holes in ASTRID and TNG300 follow a tight, redshift-invariant M_BH–M_⋆ relation from z=2 to 0.5; departures mark merger-driven high-mass quenchers, tidally stripped overmassive satellites, and undermassi...