Enhanced accretion rates of stars on Super-massive Black Holes by star-disk interactions in galactic nuclei
Andreas Just, Denis Yurin, Maxim Makukov, Peter Berczik, Chingis, Omarov, Rainer Spurzem, Emanuel Y. Vilkoviskij

TL;DR
This study models how star-disk interactions in galactic nuclei increase star accretion rates onto super-massive black holes, highlighting the importance of dissipative forces and phase space asymmetries in fueling active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent N-body simulation framework incorporating star-disk interactions, providing new insights into accretion processes in galactic centers.
Findings
Star accretion rates are significantly enhanced by star-disk interactions.
The model demonstrates increased fueling of active galactic nuclei.
Tidal stellar disruption rates are higher due to disk effects.
Abstract
We investigate the dynamical interaction of a central star cluster surrounding a super-massive black hole and a central accretion disk. The dissipative force acting on stars in the disk leads to an enhanced mass flow towards the super-massive black hole and to an asymmetry in the phase space distribution due to the rotating accretion disk. The accretion disk is considered as a stationary Keplerian rotating disk, which is vertically extended in order to employ a fully self-consistent treatment of stellar dynamics including the dissipative force originating from star-gas ram pressure effects. The stellar system is treated with a direct high-accuracy N-body integration code. A star-by-star representation, desirable in N-body simulations, cannot be extended to real particle numbers yet. Hence, we carefully discuss the scaling behavior of our model with regard to particle number and tidal…
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