Circumnuclear Media of Quiescent Supermassive Black Holes
Aleksey Generozov, Nicholas C. Stone, Brian D. Metzger

TL;DR
This study models the steady-state hot gas environment around quiescent supermassive black holes, analyzing accretion processes, stability conditions, and implications for black hole growth and observational signatures.
Contribution
It provides analytic estimates for gas inflow rates and stability conditions in quiescent galactic nuclei, linking theoretical models with observed X-ray luminosities.
Findings
Thermally-stable accretion cannot explain rapid growth of low-mass black holes.
Gas feeding in low-mass galaxies likely occurs from large-scale inflows or instabilities.
Implications for SMBH occupation fraction and outflow environments in low-mass galaxies.
Abstract
We calculate steady-state, one-dimensional hydrodynamic profiles of hot gas in slowly accreting ("quiescent") galactic nuclei for a range of central black hole masses , parametrized gas heating rates, and observationally-motivated stellar density profiles. Mass is supplied to the circumnuclear medium by stellar winds, while energy is injected primarily by stellar winds, supernovae, and black hole feedback. Analytic estimates are derived for the stagnation radius (where the radial velocity of the gas passes through zero) and the large scale gas inflow rate, , as a function of and the gas heating efficiency, the latter being related to the star-formation history. We assess the conditions under which radiative instabilities develop in the hydrostatic region near the stagnation radius, both in the case of a single burst of star formation and for the…
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