FROST-CLUSTERS -- I. Hierarchical star cluster assembly boosts intermediate-mass black hole formation
Antti Rantala, Thorsten Naab, Natalia Lah\'en

TL;DR
This study uses advanced N-body simulations to show that hierarchical assembly of star clusters at low metallicity can efficiently produce intermediate-mass black holes, which may seed supermassive black holes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that hierarchical star cluster assembly leads to rapid IMBH formation through stellar collisions and mergers, a process not originating from initial massive clusters.
Findings
IMBHs up to ~2200 solar masses form rapidly.
IMBHs often result from stellar collisions and mergers.
Hierarchical cluster formation naturally seeds supermassive black holes.
Abstract
Observations and high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations indicate that massive star clusters assemble hierarchically from sub-clusters with a universal power-law cluster mass function. We study the consequences of such assembly for the formation of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) at low metallicities () with our updated N-body code BIFROST based on the hierarchical fourth-order forward integrator. BIFROST integrates few-body systems using secular and regularized techniques including post-Newtonian equations of motion up to order PN3.5 and gravitational-wave recoil kicks for BHs. Single stellar evolution is treated using the fast population synthesis code SEVN. We evolve three cluster assembly regions with -- stars following a realistic IMF in 1000 sub-clusters for Myr. IMBHs with masses up to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanics and Biomechanics Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
