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BLACK HOLE FORAGING: FEEDBACK DRIVES FEEDING

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-23, 16:25 authored by Walter Dehnen, Andrew King
We suggest a new picture of supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth in galaxy centers. Momentum-driven feedback from an accreting hole gives significant orbital energy, but little angular momentum to the surrounding gas. Once central accretion drops, the feedback weakens and swept-up gas falls back toward the SMBH on near-parabolic orbits. These intersect near the black hole with partially opposed specific angular momenta, causing further infall and ultimately the formation of a small-scale accretion disk. The feeding rates into the disk typically exceed Eddington by factors of a few, growing the hole on the Salpeter timescale and stimulating further feedback. Natural consequences of this picture include (1) the formation and maintenance of a roughly toroidal distribution of obscuring matter near the hole; (2) random orientations of successive accretion disk episodes; (3) the possibility of rapid SMBH growth; (4) tidal disruption of stars and close binaries formed from infalling gas, resulting in visible flares and ejection of hypervelocity stars; (5) super-solar abundances of the matter accreting on to the SMBH; and (6) a lower central dark-matter density, and hence annihilation signal, than adiabatic SMBH growth implies. We also suggest a simple subgrid recipe for implementing this process in numerical simulations.

Funding

We thank Ken Pounds, Chris Nixon, and Peter Hague for helpful conversations. Theoretical astrophysics in Leicester is supported by an STFC Consolidated Grant.

History

Citation

Astrophysical Journal Letters, 2013, 777 (2), pp. ?-? (5)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Astrophysical Journal Letters

Publisher

American Astronomical Society, IOP Publishing

issn

2041-8205

eissn

2041-8213

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2019-10-23

Publisher version

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2041-8205/777/2/L28

Language

en