Investigating the retention of intermediate-mass black holes in star clusters using N-body simulations
Symeon Konstantinidis, Pau Amaro-Seoane, Kostas D. Kokkotas

TL;DR
This study uses advanced N-body simulations to explore how intermediate-mass black holes behave within star clusters, focusing on their interactions, gravitational wave emissions, and potential ejection from clusters, providing insights for future gravitational wave detection.
Contribution
First direct-summation N-body simulations including relativistic effects to study IMBH dynamics and gravitational wave signals in star clusters.
Findings
Detected an intermediate mass-ratio inspiral (IMRI) leading to a merger.
Gravitational waves fall within detectable frequency ranges for future observatories.
Merger can cause the IMBH to escape the star cluster.
Abstract
Contrary to supermassive and stellar-mass black holes (SBHs), the existence of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) with masses ranging between 10^{2-5} Msun has not yet been confirmed. The main problem in the detection is that the innermost stellar kinematics of globular clusters (GCs) or small galaxies, the possible natural loci to IMBHs, are very difficult to resolve. However, if IMBHs reside in the centre of GCs, a possibility is that they interact dynamically with their environment. A binary formed with the IMBH and a compact object of the GC would naturally lead to a prominent source of gravitational radiation, detectable with future observatories. We use N-body simulations to study the evolution of GCs containing an IMBH and calculate the gravitational radiation emitted from dynamically formed IMBH-SBH binaries and the possibility that the IMBH escapes the GC after an IMBH-SBH…
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