Feeding SMBHs through supersonic turbulence and ballistic accretion
Alexander Hobbs, Sergei Nayakshin, Chris Power, Andrew King

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that supersonic turbulence significantly enhances gas accretion onto supermassive black holes by enabling ballistic inflow of dense filaments, bypassing the inefficiencies of traditional disc accretion.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of ballistic accretion driven by turbulence, showing how velocity dispersion increases SMBH feeding rates beyond previous models.
Findings
Turbulence increases SMBH accretion rates by up to several orders of magnitude.
Ballistic accretion involves dense filaments traveling unaffected by hydrodynamical drag.
A simple analytical formula captures the simulation results within a factor of a few.
Abstract
It has long been recognised that the main obstacle to accretion of gas onto supermassive black holes (SMBHs) is large specific angular momentum. It is feared that the gas settles in a large scale disc, and that accretion would then proceed too inefficiently to explain the masses of the observed SMBHs. Here we point out that, while the mean angular momentum in the bulge is very likely to be large, the deviations from the mean can also be significant. Indeed, cosmological simulations show that velocity and angular momentum fields of gas flows onto galaxies are very complex. Furthermore, inside bulges the gas velocity distribution can be further randomised by the velocity kicks due to feedback from star formation. We perform hydrodynamical simulations of gaseous rotating shells infalling onto an SMBH, attempting to quantify the importance of velocity dispersion in the gas at relatively…
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