Ejection of Supermassive Black Holes from Galaxy Cores
Alessia Gualandris, David Merritt

TL;DR
This study uses high-accuracy simulations to analyze how supermassive black holes are ejected from galaxy cores due to gravitational wave kicks, affecting stellar distributions and core structures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed dynamical model of SMBH ejection and its impact on galaxy cores, including long-term oscillation behavior and core density changes.
Findings
SMBH oscillations follow three distinct phases.
Damped oscillations can last up to 1 Gyr in bright galaxies.
Ejected SMBHs create significant stellar mass deficits in galaxy centers.
Abstract
[Abridged] Recent numerical relativity simulations have shown that the emission of gravitational waves during the merger of two supermassive black holes (SMBHs) delivers a kick to the final hole, with a magnitude as large as 4000 km/s. We study the motion of SMBHs ejected from galaxy cores by such kicks and the effects on the stellar distribution using high-accuracy direct N-body simulations. Following the kick, the motion of the SMBH exhibits three distinct phases. (1) The SMBH oscillates with decreasing amplitude, losing energy via dynamical friction each time it passes through the core. Chandrasekhar's theory accurately reproduces the motion of the SMBH in this regime if 2 < ln Lambda < 3 and if the changing core density is taken into account. (2) When the amplitude of the motion has fallen to roughly the core radius, the SMBH and core begin to exhibit oscillations about their common…
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