论文标题
超新星壳可以在银河核中喂食超质量黑洞吗?
Can supernova shells feed supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei?
论文作者
论文摘要
We simulate shells created by supernovae expanding into the interstellar medium (ISM) of the nuclear region of a galaxy, and analyze how the shell evolution is influenced by the supernova (SN) position relative to the galactic center, by the interstellar matter (ISM) density, and by the combined gravitational pull of the nuclear star cluster (NSC) and supermassive black hole (SMBH).We adopted simplified hydrodynamical使用3D(代码环)中的无限层薄层近似模拟,并确定壳膨胀是否以及何处将新的气体带入SMBH周围的内parsec。模拟表明,在银河系旋转轴周围的圆锥形区域内发生的超新星可以喂养SMBH周围的中央积聚盘。对于环境密度在10 $^3 $和10 $^5 $ cm $^{ - 3} $之间,通过单个超新星,平均质量沉积在中央parsec中的平均质量在10至1000个太阳能之间,取决于环境密度和超级新闻事件的空间分布。在银河中心附近的星爆事件发生后发生的超新星可以根据Starburst的幅度向中央Parsec提供两到三个数量级的质量。沉积的质量通常会遇到并连接一个积聚磁盘。然后将质量的命运分配在SMBH的生长和磁盘上的能量驱动的流出之间。
We simulate shells created by supernovae expanding into the interstellar medium (ISM) of the nuclear region of a galaxy, and analyze how the shell evolution is influenced by the supernova (SN) position relative to the galactic center, by the interstellar matter (ISM) density, and by the combined gravitational pull of the nuclear star cluster (NSC) and supermassive black hole (SMBH).We adopted simplified hydrodynamical simulations using the infinitesimally thin layer approximation in 3D (code RING) and determined whether and where the shell expansion may bring new gas into the inner parsec around the SMBH. The simulations show that supernovae occurring within a conical region around the rotational axis of the galaxy can feed the central accretion disk surrounding the SMBH. For ambient densities between 10$^3$ and 10$^5$ cm$^{-3}$, the average mass deposited into the central parsec by individual supernovae varies between 10 to 1000 solar masses depending on the ambient density and the spatial distribution of supernova events. Supernova occurring in the aftermath of a starburst event near a galactic center can supply two to three orders of magnitude more mass into the central parsec, depending on the magnitude of the starburst. The deposited mass typically encounters and joins an accretion disk. The fate of that mass is then divided between the growth of the SMBH and an energetically driven outflow from the disk.