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Photograph of Ross Church

Ross Church

Senior lecturer

Photograph of Ross Church

The ecology of the galactic centre : Nuclear stellar clusters and supermassive black holes

Author

  • Melvyn B. Davies
  • Abbas Askar
  • Ross P. Church

Summary, in English

Supermassive black holes are found in most galactic nuclei. A large fraction of these nuclei also contain a nuclear stellar cluster surrounding the black hole. Here we consider the idea that the nuclear stellar cluster formed first and that the supermassive black hole grew later. In particular we consider the merger of three stellar clusters to form a nuclear stellar cluster, where some of these clusters contain a single intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH). In the cases where multiple clusters contain IMBHs, we discuss whether the black holes are likely to merge and whether such mergers are likely to result in the ejection of the merged black hole from the nuclear stellar cluster. In some cases, no supermassive black hole will form as any merger product is not retained. This is a natural pathway to explain those galactic nuclei that contain a nuclear stellar cluster but apparently lack a supermassive black hole; M33 being a nearby example. Alternatively, if an IMBH merger product is retained within the nuclear stellar cluster, it may subsequently grow, e.g. via the tidal disruption of stars, to form a supermassive black hole.

Department/s

  • Lund Observatory - Has been reorganised
  • eSSENCE: The e-Science Collaboration

Publishing year

2019

Language

English

Pages

80-83

Publication/Series

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union

Volume

14

Issue

351

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Topic

  • Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Keywords

  • black holes
  • galactic nuclei
  • Stellar clusters

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1743-9213