论文标题
用重力波探测积物物理
Probing Accretion Physics with Gravitational Waves
论文作者
论文摘要
极端质量比灵感(EMRIS)的引力波观测提供了通过积聚磁盘诱导二进制磁盘的扭矩探测活性银河核(AGN)的环境的机会。在贝叶斯框架内,我们研究了使用激光干涉仪空间天线(LISA)的重力波观测来测量这种环境效应的何种效果。我们专注于行星型迁移在准灵感上引起的扭矩,并使用不同的处方进行几何薄和辐射效率的磁盘。我们发现,丽莎可以检测到$α$和$β$磁盘处方的各种磁盘粘度和积聚率的迁移。对于具有5000万美元的典型emri,$ 50M_ \ odot+10^6m_ \ odot $,我们发现Lisa可以区分$α$和$β$磁盘的迁移,并用$ \ sim 20 \%$ $相对精确度测量扭矩振幅。提供了一个准确的扭矩模型,我们还展示了如何将扭矩的重力测量结果转换为磁盘属性的约束。此外,我们表明,如果确定了电磁对应物,则对AGN EMRI系统的多通电器观察将产生磁盘粘度的直接测量。最后,我们研究了忽视环境影响在分析重力波信号的影响,在初级质量和自旋中发现3 $σ$偏见,并表明忽略这种效果会导致对一般相对性的偏差的错误检测。这项工作证明了引力观测作为吸积盘物理学的探针的科学潜力,仅通过电磁观测来访问。
Gravitational-wave observations of extreme mass ratio inspirals (EMRIs) offer the opportunity to probe the environments of active galactic nuclei (AGN) through the torques that accretion disks induce on the binary. Within a Bayesian framework, we study how well such environmental effects can be measured using gravitational wave observations from the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). We focus on the torque induced by planetary-type migration on quasicircular inspirals, and use different prescriptions for geometrically thin and radiatively efficient disks. We find that LISA could detect migration for a wide range of disk viscosities and accretion rates, for both $α$ and $β$ disk prescriptions. For a typical EMRI with masses $50M_\odot+10^6M_\odot$, we find that LISA could distinguish between migration in $α$ and $β$ disks and measure the torque amplitude with $\sim 20\%$ relative precision. Provided an accurate torque model, we also show how to turn gravitational-wave measurements of the torque into constraints on the disk properties. Furthermore, we show that, if an electromagnetic counterpart is identified, the multimessenger observations of the AGN EMRI system will yield direct measurements of the disk viscosity. Finally, we investigate the impact of neglecting environmental effects in the analysis of the gravitational-wave signal, finding 3$σ$ biases in the primary mass and spin, and showing that ignoring such effects can lead to false detection of a deviation from general relativity. This work demonstrates the scientific potential of gravitational observations as probes of accretion-disk physics, accessible so far through electromagnetic observations only.