Perturbations of Intermediate-mass Black Holes on Stellar Orbits in the Galactic Center
Alessia Gualandris, David Merritt

TL;DR
This study investigates how intermediate-mass black holes influence stellar orbits near the Milky Way's center, revealing significant orbital changes and potential star ejections depending on the IMBH's mass and position.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed N-body simulations of IMBH effects on S-star orbits, constraining IMBH parameters based on observed stellar dynamics.
Findings
IMBHs >1000 Msun significantly alter S-star orbits.
IMBHs can eject stars, creating hypervelocity stars.
Orbital elements change notably within a few years for massive IMBHs.
Abstract
We study the short- and long-term effects of an intermediate mass black hole (IMBH) on the orbits of stars bound to the supermassive black hole (SMBH) at the center of the Milky Way. A regularized N-body code including post-Newtonian terms is used to carry out direct integrations of 19 stars in the S-star cluster for 10 Myr. The mass of the IMBH is assigned one of four values from 400 Msun to 4000 Msun, and its initial semi-major axis with respect to the SMBH is varied from 0.3-30 mpc, bracketing the radii at which inspiral of the IMBH is expected to stall. We consider two values for the eccentricity of the IMBH/SMBH binary, e=(0,0.7), and 12 values for the orientation of the binary's plane. Changes at the level of 1% in the orbital elements of the S-stars could occur in just a few years if the IMBH is sufficiently massive. On time scales of 1 Myr or longer, the IMBH efficiently…
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