论文标题
通过二进制冲刷和重力波线形成最大的银河核心
Formation of the largest galactic cores through binary scouring and gravitational wave recoil
论文作者
论文摘要
通常观察到巨大的椭圆星系在其投影的径向光谱中具有中央核。长期以来,人们一直认为这样的核心是通过“二进制冲刷”形成的,例如通过合并带来的超级质量黑洞(SMBHS),形成了从银河中心的硬二元和弹射星。但是,最大的核心,例如A2261-BCG中的〜3KPC核心,以这种方式解释仍然具有挑战性。在本文中,我们运行了一套干燥的星系合并模拟,以探索大规模椭圆星系中中央核心形成的三种不同情况:“二进制搜查”,“潮汐沉积”和“引力波(GW)诱导的后退”。使用Griffin代码,我们在合并星系中自言自语对星星,暗物质和SMBH进行建模,遵循SMBH动力学,直至形成硬二进制。我们发现,我们只能解释A2261-BCG的较大表面亮度核心,并结合通过二进制冲刷产生一个小〜1kpc核心的主要合并,然后是其SMBH的随后GW后坐力,该后smbh的后退是为了增强核心大小。我们表明,同一模型还可以解释在A2261-BCG的核心区域中观察到的明亮的“结”。这种情况的关键预测是一个偏移SMBH,周围是紧凑的结合恒星簇和非发散的中央密度曲线。我们表明,在A2261-BCG的核心区域中观察到的明亮的“结”最好解释为由次要合并导致的停滞perturber,尽管最亮的弹出smbhs可能代表了被恒星绑定的恒星所包围的弹出SMBH。
Massive elliptical galaxies are typically observed to have central cores in their projected radial light profiles. Such cores have long been thought to form through `binary scouring' as supermassive black holes (SMBHs), brought in through mergers, form a hard binary and eject stars from the galactic centre. However, the most massive cores, like the ~3kpc core in A2261-BCG, remain challenging to explain in this way. In this paper, we run a suite of dry galaxy merger simulations to explore three different scenarios for central core formation in massive elliptical galaxies: `binary scouring', `tidal deposition' and `gravitational wave (GW) induced recoil'. Using the Griffin code, we self-consistently model the stars, dark matter and SMBHs in our merging galaxies, following the SMBH dynamics through to the formation of a hard binary. We find that we can only explain the large surface brightness core of A2261-BCG with a combination of a major merger that produces a small ~1kpc core through binary scouring, followed by the subsequent GW recoil of its SMBH that acts to grow the core size. We show that this same model can also explain the bright `knots' observed in the core region of A2261-BCG. Key predictions of this scenario are an offset SMBH surrounded by a compact cluster of bound stars and a non-divergent central density profile. We show that the bright `knots' observed in the core region of A2261-BCG are best explained as stalled perturbers resulting from minor mergers, though the brightest may also represent ejected SMBHs surrounded by a stellar cloak of bound stars.