A disturbance in the force. How force fluctuations hinder dynamical friction and induce core stalling
Pierfrancesco Di Cintio, Bruno Marcos

TL;DR
This study investigates how force fluctuations and system granularity affect dynamical friction, revealing that in both cuspy and cored models, friction suppression is linked to particle number and granularity effects, leading to core stalling.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that force fluctuations due to granularity cause dynamical friction suppression and core stalling, challenging previous assumptions about resonance effects.
Findings
Dynamical friction suppression occurs in both cuspy and cored models.
The radius where friction ceases scales as N^{-1/2}.
Granularity effects are key to understanding core stalling.
Abstract
Dynamical friction is an important phenomena in stellar dynamics resulting in the slowing down of a test particle upon many two-body scatters with background particles. Chandrasekhar's original formulation, developed for idealized infinite and homogeneous systems, has been found to be sufficiently accurate even in models of finite extent and radially dependent density profiles. However, in some cases body simulations evidenced a breakdown of Chandrasekhar's formalism. In particular, in the case of cored stellar systems, the analytical predictions underestimate the rate of in-fall of the test particle. Several explanations for such discrepancy have been proposed so far, in spite of this it remains unclear whether the origin is a finite N effect or an effect arising from the resonance of the orbits of the test and field particles, which is independent on , such as dynamical…
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