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Stellar relaxation processes near the Galactic massive black hole

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2011

T. Alexander
Affiliation:
Weizmann Institute of Science
Mario Livio
Affiliation:
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
Anton M. Koekemoer
Affiliation:
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
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Summary

The massive black hole (MBH) in the Galactic Center (GC) and the stars around it form a unique stellar dynamics laboratory for studying how relaxation processes affect the distribution of stars and compact remnants and lead to close interactions between them and the MBH. Recent theoretical studies suggest that processes beyond “minimal” 2-body relaxation may operate and even dominate relaxation and its consequences in the GC. I describe loss-cone refilling by massive perturbers, strong mass segregation and resonant relaxation; review observational evidence that these processes play a role in the GC; and discuss some cosmic implications for the rates of gravitational wave emission events from compact remnants inspiraling into MBHs, and the coalescence timescales of binary MBHs.

Introduction

The M ~ 4 × 106M MBH in the GC and the stars around it are the closest and observationally most accessible of such systems (Eisenhauer et al. 2005; Ghez et al. 2005). Observations of the GC thus offer a unique opportunity to study in great detail the effects of the MBH and its extreme environment on star formation, stellar evolution and stellar dynamics, and the interactions of stars and compact remnants with the MBH.

Here the focus is stellar relaxation processes. Relaxation plays an important role in a wide range of phenomena that involve close interactions with an MBH (the “losscone problem,” Section 1.1).

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Black Holes , pp. 261 - 285
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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