Modelling the formation of the circumnuclear ring in the Galactic centre
Michela Mapelli, Alessandro A. Trani

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how a molecular cloud's tidal disruption can form the dense, clumpy circumnuclear ring around the Galactic centre's supermassive black hole, matching observed properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation-based model demonstrating the formation of the circumnuclear ring through cloud disruption, explaining its structure and properties.
Findings
Outer ring matches observed mass and rotation velocity.
Inner and outer rings are misaligned by ~24 degrees.
Simulation results support the tidal disruption formation scenario.
Abstract
Several thousand solar masses of molecular, atomic and ionized gas lie in the innermost ~10 pc of our Galaxy. The most relevant structure of molecular gas is the circumnuclear ring (CNR), a dense and clumpy ring surrounding the supermassive black hole (SMBH), with a radius of ~2 pc. We propose that the CNR formed through the tidal disruption of a molecular cloud, and we investigate this scenario by means of N-body smoothed-particle hydrodynamics simulations. We ran a grid of simulations with different cloud mass (4X10^4, 1.3X10^5 solar masses), different initial orbital velocity (v_in=0.2-0.5 v_esc, where v_esc is the escape velocity from the SMBH), and different impact parameter (b=8, 26 pc). The disruption of the molecular cloud leads to the formation of very dense and clumpy gas rings, containing most of the initial cloud mass. If the initial orbital velocity of the cloud is…
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