High accuracy measurement of gravitational wave back-reaction in the OJ287 black hole binary




Valtonen M.J., Dey L., Hudec R., Zola S., Gopakumar A., Mikkola S., Ciprini S., Matsumoto K., Sadakane K., Kidger M., Gazeas K., Nilsson K., Berdyugin A., Piirola V., Jermak H., Baliyan K.S., Reichart D.E., Caton D.B., Haque S., González G., Hynes R.; the OJ287-15/16 Collaboration

González Gabriela, Hynes Robert

IAU Symposium

PublisherCambridge University Press

2017

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, 13(S338)

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union

13

29

36

1743-9213

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921318000170



Blazar OJ287 exhibits large thermal flares at least twice every 12 years. The times of these flares have been predicted successfully using the model of a quasi-Keplerian eccentric black hole binary where the secondary impacts the accretion disk of the primary, creating the thermal flares. New measurements of the historical light curve have been combined with the observations of the 2015 November/December flare to identify the impact record since year 1886, and to constrain the orbit of the binary. The orbital solution shows that the binary period, now 12.062 years, is decreasing at the rate of 36 days per century. This corresponds to an energy loss to gravitational waves that is 6.5 ± 4 % less than the rate predicted by the standard quadrupolar gravitational wave (GW) emission. We show that the difference is due to higher order gravitational radiation reaction terms that include the dominant order tail contributions.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 18:54