The mass budget for intermediate-mass black holes in dense star clusters
Yanlong Shi, Michael Y. Grudi\'c, Philip F. Hopkins

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and semi-analytic models to predict the formation and mass scaling of intermediate-mass black holes in dense star clusters, finding they are generally small and below observational limits.
Contribution
It introduces a new combined simulation and semi-analytic approach to predict IMBH masses based on cluster properties, highlighting their typically small sizes.
Findings
IMBH masses scale as $v_{cl}^{3/2}$ with cluster velocity.
Predicted IMBH masses are typically 100-1000 solar masses.
IMBHs are generally smaller than observed supermassive black holes.
Abstract
Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) could form via runaway merging of massive stars in a young massive star cluster (YMC). We combine a suite of numerical simulations of YMC formation with a semi-analytic model for dynamical friction and merging of massive stars and evolution of a central quasi-star, to predict how final quasi-star and relic IMBH masses scale with cluster properties (and compare with observations). The simulations argue that inner YMC density profiles at formation are steep (approaching isothermal), producing some efficient merging even in clusters with relatively low effective densities, unlike models which assume flat central profiles resembling those of globular clusters (GCs) {\em after} central relaxation. Our results can be approximated by simple analytic scalings, with where is…
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