scholarly journals Negative dynamical friction on compact objects moving through dense gas

2020 ◽  
Vol 492 (2) ◽  
pp. 2755-2761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrei Gruzinov ◽  
Yuri Levin ◽  
Christopher D Matzner

ABSTRACT An overdense wake is created by a gravitating object moving through a gaseous medium, and this wake pulls back on the object and slows it down. This is conventional dynamical friction in a gaseous medium. We argue that if the object drives a sufficiently powerful outflow, the wake is destroyed and instead an extended underdense region is created behind the object. In this case the overall gravitational force is applied in the direction of the object’s motion, producing a negative dynamical friction (NDF). Black holes in dense gas drive powerful outflows and may experience the NDF, although extensive numerical work is probably needed to demonstrate or refute this conclusively. NDF may be important for stellar-mass black holes and neutron stars inside ‘common envelopes’ in binary systems, for stellar mass black holes inside active galactic nucleus discs, or for massive black holes growing through super-Eddington accretion in early Universe.

1974 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 194-212
Author(s):  
M. J. Rees

The physics of spherically symmetrical accretion onto a compact object is briefly reviewed. Neither neutron stars nor stellar-mass black holes are likely to be readily detectable if they are isolated and accreting from the interstellar medium. Supermassive black holes in intergalactic space may however be detectable. The effects of accretion onto compact objects in binary systems are then discussed, with reference to the phenomena observed in variable X-ray sources.


2014 ◽  
Vol 784 (2) ◽  
pp. L38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piero Madau ◽  
Francesco Haardt ◽  
Massimo Dotti

2019 ◽  
Vol 885 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grzegorz Wiktorowicz ◽  
Łukasz Wyrzykowski ◽  
Martyna Chruslinska ◽  
Jakub Klencki ◽  
Krzysztof A. Rybicki ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 638 ◽  
pp. A100
Author(s):  
R. Arcodia ◽  
G. Ponti ◽  
A. Merloni ◽  
K. Nandra

Over the years, numerous attempts have been made to connect the phenomenology and physics of mass accretion onto stellar-mass and super-massive black holes in a scale-invariant fashion. In this paper, we explore this connection at the radiatively efficient (and non-jetted) end of accretion modes by comparing the relationship between the luminosity of the accretion disc and corona in the two source classes. Motivated by the apparently tight relationship between these two quantities in active galactic nuclei (AGNs), we analyse 458 RXTE-PCA archival observations of the X-ray binary (XRB) GX 339–4, using this object as an exemplar for the properties of XRBs in general. We focus on the soft and soft-intermediate states, which have been suggested to be analogous to radiatively efficient AGNs. The observed scatter in the log Ldisc − log Lcorona relationship of GX 339–4 is high (∼0.43 dex) and significantly larger than in a representative sample of radiatively efficient, non- or weakly jetted AGNs (∼0.30 dex). At first glance, this would appear contrary to the hypothesis that the systems simply scale with mass. On the other hand, we also find that GX 339–4 and our AGN sample show different accretion rate and power-law index distributions, with the latter in particular being broader in GX 339–4 (dispersion of ∼0.16 cf. ∼0.08 for AGN). GX 339–4 also shows an overall softer slope, with a mean value of ∼2.20 as opposed to ∼2.07 for the AGN sample. Remarkably, once similarly broad Γ and ṁ distributions are selected, the AGN sample overlaps nicely with GX 339–4 observations in the mass-normalised log Ldisc − log Lcorona plane, with a scatter of ∼0.30 − 0.33 dex in both cases. This indicates that a mass-scaling of properties might hold after all, with our results being consistent with the disc-corona systems in AGNs and XRBs exhibiting the same physical processes, albeit under different conditions for instance in terms of temperature, optical depth and/or electron energy distribution in the corona, heating-cooling balance, coronal geometry and/or black hole spin.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (12) ◽  
pp. 047
Author(s):  
Felipe F. Freitas ◽  
Carlos A.R. Herdeiro ◽  
António P. Morais ◽  
António Onofre ◽  
Roman Pasechnik ◽  
...  

Abstract We construct families, and concrete examples, of simple extensions of the Standard Model that can yield ultralight real or complex vectors or scalars with potential astrophysical relevance. Specifically, the mass range for these putative fundamental bosons (∼ 10-10-10-20 eV) would lead dynamically to both new non-black hole compact objects (bosonic stars) and new non-Kerr black holes, with masses of ∼ M⊙ to ∼ 1010 M⊙, corresponding to the mass range of astrophysical black hole candidates (from stellar mass to supermassive). For each model, we study the properties of the mass spectrum and interactions after spontaneous symmetry breaking, discuss its theoretical viability and caveats, as well as some of its potential and most relevant phenomenological implications linking them to the physics of compact objects.


2020 ◽  
Vol 638 ◽  
pp. A94 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Olejak ◽  
K. Belczynski ◽  
T. Bulik ◽  
M. Sobolewska

Aims. We present an open-access database that includes a synthetic catalog of black holes (BHs) in the Milky Way, divided by the components disk, bulge, and halo. Methods. To calculate the evolution of single and binary stars, we used the updated population synthesis code StarTrack. We applied a new model of the star formation history and chemical evolution of Galactic disk, bulge, and halo that was synthesized from observational and theoretical data. This model can be easily employed for other studies of population evolution. Results. We find that at the current Milky Way (disk+bulge+halo) contains about 1.2 × 108 single BHs with an average mass of about 14 M⊙, and 9.3 × 106 BHs in binary systems with an average mass of 19 M⊙. We present basic statistical properties of the BH population in three Galactic components such as the distributions of BH masses, velocities, or the numbers of BH binary systems in different evolutionary configurations. Conclusions. The metallicity of a stellar population has a significant effect on the final BH mass through the stellar winds. The most massive single BH in our simulation of 113 M⊙ originates from a merger of a BH and a helium star in a low-metallicity stellar environment in the Galactic halo. We constrain that only ∼0.006% of the total Galactic halo mass (including dark matter) can be hidden in the form of stellar origin BHs. These BHs cannot be detected by current observational surveys. We calculated the merger rates for current Galactic double compact objects (DCOs) for two considered common-envelope models: ∼3–81 Myr−1 for BH-BH, ∼1–9 Myr−1 for BH-neutron star (NS), and ∼14–59 Myr−1 for NS-NS systems. We show the evolution of the merger rates of DCOs since the formation of the Milky Way until the current moment with the new star formation model of the Galaxy.


2016 ◽  
Vol 457 (4) ◽  
pp. 4499-4506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl-Johan Haster ◽  
Zhilu Wang ◽  
Christopher P. L. Berry ◽  
Simon Stevenson ◽  
John Veitch ◽  
...  

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