Compact-object Mergers in the Galactic Center: Evolution in Triaxial Clusters
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Affiliation
Univ Arizona, Steward ObservIssue Date
2020-04-30Keywords
Galactic centerCompact objects
Gravitational wave sources
Low-mass X-ray binary stars
Star clusters
Supermassive black holes
Stellar dynamics
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IOP PUBLISHING LTDCitation
Mathew W. Bub and Cristobal Petrovich 2020 ApJ 894 15Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNALRights
Copyright © 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
There is significant observational evidence that a large fraction of galactic centers, including those in the Milky Way and M31, host a supermassive black hole (SMBH) embedded in a triaxial nuclear star cluster. In this work, we study the secular orbital evolution of binaries in these environments and characterize the regions and morphological properties of nuclear star clusters that lead to gravitational wave mergers and/or tidal captures. We show that even a modest level of triaxiality in the density distribution of a cluster (an ellipsoid with axis ratios of 0.7 and 0.95) dramatically enhances the merger rates in the central parsecs of the Galaxy by a factor of up to similar to 10-30 relative to a spherical density distribution. Moreover, we show that the merger fraction of binaries with semimajor axes in the range 10-100 au remains above 10% for the entire central parsec of the cluster, reaching values close to unity at a distance of similar to 0.2-0.4 pc from the SMBH. We understand this large merger efficiency in terms of two distinct mechanisms: (i) eccentricity oscillations driven by the dominant axisymmetric part of the cluster potential that are enhanced by the slow modulation of a binary's angular momentum from the triaxial contribution, similar to the well-known octupole-level dynamics in three-body systems; and (ii) chaotic diffusion of eccentricities arising when the nodal precession timescale of a binary's orbit about the SMBH becomes comparable to its characteristic secular timescale. Overall, our results indicate that galactic centers are significantly more collisional than previously thought, with mergers taking place up to the effective radii of their nuclear star clusters.ISSN
0004-637XVersion
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3847/1538-4357/ab8461
