Intermediate mass black holes in AGN disks: I. Production & Growth
B. McKernan, K. E. S. Ford, W. Lyra, H. B. Perets

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel mechanism for rapidly growing intermediate mass black holes within AGN disks through collisions and gas accretion, highlighting parallels with planet formation and potential for long-term survival.
Contribution
It introduces a new model for IMBH growth in AGN disks involving NCO collisions and gas accretion, surpassing traditional stellar cluster models.
Findings
IMBHs can grow rapidly via collisions with NCOs at low velocities.
Gas damping maintains NCOs in the disk, facilitating collisions and growth.
IMBHs can open gaps and potentially survive beyond the AGN phase.
Abstract
Here we propose a mechanism for efficiently growing intermediate mass black holes (IMBH) in disks around supermassive black holes. Stellar mass objects can efficiently agglomerate when facilitated by the gas disk. Stars, compact objects and binaries can migrate, accrete and merge within disks around supermassive black holes. While dynamical heating by cusp stars excites the velocity dispersion of nuclear cluster objects (NCOs) in the disk, gas in the disk damps NCO orbits. If gas damping dominates, NCOs remain in the disk with circularized orbits and large collision cross-sections. IMBH seeds can grow extremely rapidly by collisions with disk NCOs at low relative velocities, allowing for super-Eddington growth rates. Once an IMBH seed has cleared out its feeding zone of disk NCOs, growth of IMBH seeds can become dominated by gas accretion from the AGN disk. However, the IMBH can migrate…
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