Chaotic migration of LISA Extreme Mass Ratio Inspirals in a turbulent accretion disk: effect on waveform de-phasing
Mudit Garg, Lucio Mayer, Yinhao Wu, Yacine Ali-Haïmoud, Douglas N. C. Lin
TLDR
This paper shows that turbulent accretion disks can cause chaotic migration of LISA EMRIs, making gas-induced gravitational wave dephasing detectable.
Key contributions
- Models turbulent accretion disk torques on EMRIs, departing from laminar disk assumptions.
- Introduces a general prescription for turbulent torque ($T_{\rm turb}$) as a Gaussian around $T_{\rm lin}$.
- Computes GW dephasing for a "golden" EMRI across various disk parameters.
- Shows turbulence can make gas-induced dephasing detectable when linear torques alone wouldn't.
Why it matters
Accurately interpreting LISA EMRI signals requires understanding their environment. This paper shows that turbulent accretion disks, often overlooked, can significantly alter EMRI trajectories and make gas-induced dephasing detectable. It motivates more realistic MHD simulations for precise gravitational wave predictions.
Original Abstract
Gravitational wave (GW) detector LISA will observe near-coalescence extreme mass ratio inspirals (EMRIs), which typically form in galactic central accretion disks. Gas torques on EMRI will alter its GW-driven inspiral trajectory from the vacuum expectation, leading to potentially LISA-observable GW dephasing ($Δψ_{\rm gas}$). Most studies compute $Δψ_{\rm gas}$ for a thin, laminar disk, with negligible flow turbulence, where the disk exerts a fairly well-understood linear torque ($T_{\rm lin}$). However, these disks must be turbulent due to magneto-rotational instability in the inner regions. Hence, we present a proof-of-concept general, agnostic prescription for the turbulent torque ($T_{\rm turb}$) acting on an EMRI by modeling it as a Gaussian distribution around $T_{\rm lin}$, based on recent advances from a global hydrodynamical (HD) study. We compute $Δψ_{\rm gas}$ for the ``golden'' circular EMRI with total source mass $M=10^6~{\rm M}_\odot$ and mass ratio $q=5\times10^{-5}$ in its final four-year evolution at redshift $z=0.276$ and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) $=50$ by varying Eddington ratio ${\rm f}_{\rm Edd}$, turbulence normalization $C$ ($=~360$ in the aforementioned HD study), disk aspect ratio $h_0$, and turbo-viscous coefficient $α$ in a reasonable parameters space. We find that for ${\rm f}_{\rm Edd}\gtrsim0.3$, $C\gtrsim300$, $h_0\gtrsim0.03$, and $α\gtrsim0.1$, gas-induced dephasings are unobservable if only considering $T_{\rm lin}$ but could become detectable ($Δψ_{\rm gas}>8/$SNR) if EMRIs exhibit chaotic migration due to turbulent gas flow. Hence, this work motivates running MHD simulations of accretion disks with embedded LISA EMRIs in the early in-spiral phase over long enough timescales to understand the evolution of their orbital elements and the imprint of the turbulent environment on their gravitational waveforms.
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