Short and long term evolution of a stellar disk around a massive black hole: The role of binaries, the cusp and stellar evolution
Diego N. Mikhaloff, Hagai B. Perets

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term dynamical evolution of a stellar disk around a massive black hole, emphasizing the roles of two-body relaxation, mass segregation, stellar evolution, and binary heating, with implications for the Galactic center.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis combining analytic and numerical methods to understand how various physical processes shape the structure and kinematics of stellar disks over time.
Findings
Two-body relaxation and mass segregation dominate disk evolution.
Massive stars influence the kinematic heating of low-mass stars.
Disk remains thin over 100 million years, suggesting long-lived structures.
Abstract
We study the dynamical evolution of a stellar disk orbiting a massive black hole. We explore the role of two-body relaxation, mass segregation, stellar evolution and binary heating in affecting the disk evolution, and consider the impact of the nuclear cluster structure and the stellar-disk mass-function. We use analytic arguments and numerical calculations, and apply them to study the evolution of a stellar disk (similar to that observed in the Galactic center; GC), both on the short (few Myr) and longer (100 Myr) evolutionary timescales. We find the dominant processes affecting the disk evolution are two-body relaxation and mass segregation where as binary heating have only a little contribution. Massive stars play a dominant role in kinematically heating low mass stars, and driving them to high eccentricities/inclinations. Multi-mass models with realistic mass-functions for the disk…
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