Hydrodynamic simulations of black hole evolution in AGN discs I: orbital alignment of highly inclined satellites
Connar Rowan, Henry Whitehead, Gaia Fabj, Philip Kirkeberg, Martin E. Pessah, Bence Kocsis

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to analyze how black holes on inclined orbits evolve within AGN discs, revealing that inclination damping occurs faster than previously estimated, affecting black hole capture rates.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed hydrodynamical analysis of black hole orbital damping in AGN discs across a range of inclinations and disc densities.
Findings
Inclination damping follows a power law in sin(i) and Hill mass.
Wake morphology depends on transit depth within the disc.
Inclination damping timescale is shorter than episodic accretion models suggest.
Abstract
The frequency of compact object interactions in AGN discs is naturally tied to the number of objects embedded within it. We investigate the evolution of black holes in the nuclear stellar cluster on inclined orbits to the AGN disc by performing adiabatic hydrodynamical simulations of isolated black hole disc crossings over a range of disc densities and inclinations . We find radiation dominates the pressure in the wake that forms around the BH across the full inclination and disc density range. We identify no well defined steady state wake morphology due to the thin geometry of the disc and the vertical exponential density drop off, where the wake morphology depends on the vertical depth of the transit within the disc. The inclination damping relative the pre-transit inclination behaves as a power law in and the ambient Hill mass…
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