Stellar winds pump the heart of the Milky Way
Diego Calder\'on, Jorge Cuadra, Marc Schartmann, Andreas Burkert and, Christopher M. P. Russell

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to show that stellar winds from Wolf-Rayet stars can explain the hot accretion flow and cold disk formation near Sgr A*, influencing the black hole's activity.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mass-losing stars can naturally account for both hot and cold gas structures around Sgr A* through detailed hydrodynamical modeling.
Findings
System reaches quasi-steady state in ~500 years.
Material captured at ~10^-6 M_sun/yr at 10^-4 pc scales.
Cold disk forms after ~3000 years, consistent with observations.
Abstract
The central super-massive black hole of the Milky Way, Sgr A*, accretes at a very low rate making it a very underluminous galactic nucleus. Despite the tens of Wolf-Rayet stars present within the inner parsec supplying in stellar winds, only a negligible fraction of this material () ends up being accreted onto Sgr A*. The recent discovery of cold gas () in its vicinity raised questions about how such material could settle in the hostile () environment near Sgr A*. In this work we show that the system of mass-losing stars blowing winds can naturally account for both the hot, inefficient accretion flow, as well as the formation of a cold disk-like structure. We run hydrodynamical simulations using the grid-based code Ramses starting as early in the past as possible to observe the state of the system at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
