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arxiv: 1403.6433 · v1 · submitted 2014-03-25 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · astro-ph.HE

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Intermediate mass black holes in AGN disks II. Model predictions & observational constraints

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classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.HE
keywords disksimbhx-rayobservationalwillblackdiskholes
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If intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs) grow efficiently in gas disks around supermassive black holes, their host active galactic nucleus (AGN) disks should exhibit myriad observational signatures. Gap-opening IMBHs in AGN disks can exhibit spectral features and variability analagous to gapped protoplanetary disks. A gap-opening IMBH in the innermost disk imprints ripples and oscillations on the broad Fe K$\alpha$ line which may be detectable with future X-ray missions. A non-gap-opening IMBH will accrete and produce a soft X-ray excess relative to continuum emission. An IMBH on a retrograde orbit in an AGN disk will not open a gap and will generate soft X-rays from a bow-shock 'headwind'. Accreting IMBH in a large cavity can generate ULX-like X-ray luminosities and LINER-like optical line ratios from local ionized gas. We propose that many LINERs house a weakly accreting MBH binary in a large central disk cavity and will be luminous sources of gravitational waves (GW). IMBHs in galactic nuclei may also be detected via intermittent observational signatures including: UV/X-ray flares due to tidal disruption events, asymmetric X-ray intensity distributions as revealed by AGN transits, quasi-periodic oscillations and underluminous Type Ia supernovae. GW emitted during IMBH inspiral and collisions may be detected with eLISA and LIGO, particularly from LINERs. We summarize observational signatures and compare to current data where possible or suggest future observations.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Thick Disks, Thin Hopes: Suppressed Capture and Merger Rates in AGN

    astro-ph.HE 2026-01 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    AGN disk capture and merger rates scale as (H/R)^{-8} and drop by 10-20 orders of magnitude in thick magnetically supported disks compared to thin thermal disks.