News
In 2015, I have started a group at Eotvos University with an ERC Starting Grant "GalNUC: Astrophysical Dynamics and Statiscal Mechanics of Galactic Nuclei". We develop a comprehensive model to describe the long term behavior of astrophysical multibody systems using multidisciplanary methods. The project aims to open a new field in gravitational wave astrophysics to interpret the LIGO/VIRGO sources. Details, website |
A new approach to understand galactic nuclei |
Black-Hole Hunting with a Gas Cloud |
Measuring the Interaction of Gravitational Waves with Matter Is it possible to detect the dynamical interaction between gravitational waves and matter? In this paper, we point out that this may be a possibility: normal modes of stars can resonate with gravitational waves, dissipate gravitational waves, and heat up. Stars near the merger of supermassive black hole binaries may act as gravitational wave charged batteries. Stars far from the gravitational wave source, like our Sun, cast a gravitational wave shadow within a complex diffraction pattern which may be detected with second generation space-based GW detectors. Media coverage:press release, research highlight in Nature |
Eccentricity Growth and Orbit Flip in Near-coplanar Hierarchical Three-body SystemsIn this paper with Gongjie Li, Smadar Naoz, and Avi Loeb, we demonstrate that planetary systems can undergo a nearly 180 degree orbital flip due to the long-term gravitational effect of an outer object like a stellar companion or a massive outer planet. Before the orbital flip, the eccentricity of the inner planet grows to very high values, driving the planet to the close vicinity of the star where tidal effects operate. This mechanism can explain the origin of the observed counter-orbiting exoplanetary systems. In addition, we also showed that this mechanism enhances the tidal disruption or collision rates for different systems. Movie showing the orbital flip. Media coverage:press release, Science & Technology News, Starship asterisk* |
Resolving Gaseous Disks around Cosmological Supermassive Black Holes with Transiting StarsSupermassive black holes are typically surrounded by a dense stellar population in the nuclei of galaxies. Stars crossing the line of site in active galactic nuclei (AGN) produce a characteristic transit light curve, just like extrasolar planets do when they transit their host star. In our paper with Harvard graduate student Bence Béky, we examined the possibility of finding such AGN transits in deep optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray surveys. Such observations could be used to constrain black hole mass, spin, inclination, and accretion rate. Transit light curves could be used to image accretion disks with unprecedented resolution, allowing us to resolve the supermassive black hole silhouette in distant AGNs. |
A new class of migration: Type-1.5 |
Repeated Burst Events for Earth-based Gravitational Wave Detectors In our paper with Janna Levin, we provide theoretical predictions for a new type of gravitational wave event for terrestrial detectors, more luminous and possibly more frequent than other types of sources. These are eccentric gravitational wave capture events between stellar mass compact objects in galactic nuclei. Waveforms consist of a series of short "bursts" which repeat over minutes to hours followed by a loud "chirp". The video below shows a neutron star orbiting around, and gradually inspiraling into a spinning black hole. Listen to the sound of gravitational waves! You can find more details here or look at our paper.
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Measuring Accretion Disks with Gravitational Waves Gas flowing into supermassive black holes can shine spectacularly, brighter than the hundreds of billions of stars in the surrounding galaxy. These objects are called active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Understanding the physics of such accretion disks is one of the most interesting open problems of our time. In our papers with Nico Yunes and Avi Loeb we examine the observability of AGNs and the relevant physical processes, if a stellar object is embedded in the accretion disk. We show that the tidal field of the compact object clears a gap, but the disk refills due to the radiation pressure in the disk before the object merges into the black hole, producing an electromagnetic transient. We also study whether the accretion disk can be studied through gravitational wave measurements using eLISA. Indeed, the gravitational wave signal is affected by the modulated inspiral rate of the object. The underlying physical process is analogous to planetary migration in protoplanetary disks, responsible for delivering Jupiter-sized exoplanets to very short-period orbits around stars. See brief letter and detailed paper . |
Detecting Supermassive Black Hole Mergers with X-ray Spectroscopy Supermassive black holes of millions to billions of solar masses, are observed to reside at the centers of most, if not all, galaxies. During galaxy mergers, they are expected to sink to the center of the merging system forming supermassive black hole binaries. Once their separation is less than a light year, Einstein's general relativity predicts that these binaries lose energy by emitting gravitational waves and merge within billions of years. Although galaxy mergers are quite common in the Universe, the observation of supermassive black hole binaries remains elusive. In our paper with Barry McKernan et al., we pointed out a unique observable, a particular time-variable feature of X-ray iron lines for the detection of supermassive black hole binaries with future surveys. |
Recent Prize |
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