Detectability of Wandering Intermediate-Mass Black Holes in the Milky Way Galaxy from Radio to X-rays
Bryan Seepaul, Fabio Pacucci, Ramesh Narayan

TL;DR
This study models the detectability of wandering intermediate-mass black holes in the Milky Way across multiple wavelengths, predicting detection rates and proposing criteria for identifying candidates in surveys.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive multi-wavelength detection framework for wandering IMBHs and provides upper limits on their population in the Milky Way.
Findings
Approximately 27% of IMBHs detectable in X-rays with Chandra.
Around 37% detectable in near-infrared with Roman Space Telescope.
Upper limit of fewer than 2000 IMBHs in the Milky Way.
Abstract
Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs, ), are typically found at the center of dwarf galaxies and might be wandering, thus far undetected, in the Milky Way (MW). We use model spectra for advection-dominated accretion flows to compute the typical fluxes, in a range of frequencies spanning from radio to X-rays, emitted by a putative population of IMBHs wandering in five realistic, volume-weighted, MW environments. We predict that of the wandering IMBHs can be detected in the X-ray with Chandra, in the near-infrared with the Roman Space Telescope, in the sub-mm with CMB-S4 and in the radio with ngVLA. We find that the brightest fluxes are emitted by IMBHs passing through molecular clouds or cold neutral medium, where they are always detectable. We propose criteria to facilitate the selection of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
