Can gas dynamics in centres of galaxies reveal orbiting massive black holes? |
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Authors: | James Etherington Witold Maciejewski |
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Affiliation: | Astrophysics, Denys Wilkinson Building, Keble Road, Oxford OX1 3RH |
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Abstract: | If supermassive black holes in centres of galaxies form by merging of black hole remnants of massive Population III stars, then there should be a few black holes of mass one or two orders of magnitude smaller than that of the central ones, orbiting around the centre of a typical galaxy. These black holes constitute a weak perturbation in the gravitational potential, which can generate wave phenomena in gas within a disc close to the centre of the galaxy. Here, we show that a single orbiting black hole generates a three-arm spiral pattern in the central gaseous disc. The density excess in the spiral arms in the disc reaches values of 3–12 per cent when the orbiting black hole is about 10 times less massive than the central black hole. Therefore, the observed density pattern in gas can be used as a signature in detecting the most massive orbiting black holes. |
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Keywords: | hydrodynamics galaxies: kinematics and dynamics galaxies: nuclei galaxies: spiral galaxies: structure dark matter |
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