Resonant Dynamical Friction in Nuclear Star Clusters: Rapid Alignment of an Intermediate-mass Black Hole with a Stellar Disk
\'Akos Sz\"olgy\'en, Gergely M\'ath\'e, Bence Kocsis

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that intermediate-mass black holes in nuclear star clusters rapidly align with stellar disks through a process called resonant dynamical friction, which is faster than traditional dynamical friction and has implications for gravitational wave sources.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of resonant dynamical friction as a rapid alignment mechanism for IMBHs with stellar disks, supported by numerical simulations.
Findings
IMBHs align with stellar disks if initial inclination < 90°
Alignment occurs faster than Chandrasekhar dynamical friction
Stellar disks are warped and thickened by IMBHs
Abstract
We investigate the dynamical evolution of an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) in a nuclear star cluster hosting a supermassive black hole (SMBH) and both a spherical and a flattened disk-like distribution of stellar-mass objects. We use a direct N-body (phiGPU) and an orbit-averaged (N-ring) numerical integrator to simulate the orbital evolution of stars and the IMBH. We find that the IMBH's orbit gradually aligns with the stellar disk if their mutual initial inclination is less than 90 degree. If it is larger than 90 degree, i.e. counterrotating, the IMBH does not align. Initially, the rate of orbital reorientation increases linearly with the ratio of the mass of the IMBH over the SMBH mass and it is orders of magnitude faster than ordinary (i.e. Chandrasekhar) dynamical friction, particularly for high SMBH masses. The semimajor axes of the IMBH and the stars are approximately…
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