Deceleration of kicked objects due to the Galactic potential
Paul Disberg, Nicola Gaspari, Andrew J. Levan

TL;DR
This study models how velocity kicks from supernovae affect the motion of stellar remnants in the Milky Way, revealing a deceleration over time due to the Galactic potential that aligns with pulsar observations.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation framework for the evolution of kicked objects' velocities in the Galaxy, demonstrating the deceleration effect and its consistency with pulsar data.
Findings
Velocity distribution shifts to lower speeds over 200 Myr.
Objects become temporarily anisotropic in velocity orientation.
Deceleration due to Galactic potential explains pulsar velocity evolution.
Abstract
Various stellar objects experience a velocity kick at some point in their evolution. These include neutron stars and black holes at their birth or binary systems when one of the two components goes supernova. For most of these objects, the magnitude of the kick and its impact on the object dynamics remains a topic of debate. We investigate how kicks alter the velocity distribution of objects born in the Milky Way disc, both immediately after the kick and at later times, and whether these kicks are encoded in the observed population of Galactic neutron stars. We simulate the Galactic trajectories of point masses on circular orbits in the disc after being perturbed by an isotropic kick, with a Maxwellian distribution of magnitudes with km/s. Then, we simulate the motion of these point masses for Myr. These trajectories are then evaluated, either for the Milky Way…
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