Abstract

Abstract Dynamical friction (DF) against stars and gas is thought to be an important mechanism for orbital evolution of massive black holes (MBHs) in merger remnant galaxies. Recent theoretical investigations, however, show that DF does not always lead to MBH inspiral. For MBHs evolving in gas-rich backgrounds, the ionizing radiation that emerges from the innermost parts of their accretion flow can affect the surrounding gas in such a way to cause the MBHs to accelerate and gain orbital energy. This effect was dubbed “negative DF.” We use a semianalytic model to study the impact of negative DF on pairs of MBHs in merger remnant galaxies evolving under the combined influence of stellar and gaseous DF. Our results show that for a wide range of merger galaxy and MBH properties negative DF reduces the MBH pairing probability by ∼46%. The suppression of MBH pairing is most severe in galaxies with one or more of these properties: (1) a gas fraction of f g ≥ 0.1; (2) a galactic gas disk rotating close to the circular velocity; (3) MBH pairs in prograde, low eccentricity orbits; and (4) MBH pairs with mass <108 M ⊙. The last point is of importance because MBH pairs in this mass range are direct progenitors of merging binaries targeted by the future space-based gravitational wave observatory the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA).

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