Dynamical friction and the evolution of Supermassive Black hole Binaries: the final hundred-parsec problem
Fani Dosopoulou, Fabio Antonini

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamical friction process affecting supermassive black hole binaries in galaxy mergers, revealing conditions under which the binary stalls and implications for observed galactic nuclei features.
Contribution
It introduces a modified dynamical friction model including fast stars and analyzes the binary evolution, highlighting the potential for binary stalling in certain galaxy environments.
Findings
Binary eccentricity increases in shallow stellar cusps.
Decay timescales can exceed a Hubble time for low mass-ratio binaries.
Predicted presence of stalled satellites in massive galaxy cores.
Abstract
The supermassive black holes originally in the nuclei of two merging galaxies will form a binary in the remnant core. The early evolution of the massive binary is driven by dynamical friction before the binary becomes "hard" and eventually reaches coalescence through gravitational wave emission. { We consider the dynamical friction evolution of massive binaries consisting of a secondary hole orbiting inside a stellar cusp dominated by a more massive central black hole.} In our treatment we include the frictional force from stars moving faster than the inspiralling object which is neglected in the standard Chandrasekhar's treatment. We show that the binary eccentricity increases if the stellar cusp density profile rises less steeply than . In cusps shallower than the frictional timescale can become very long due to the deficit of stars moving…
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