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Forming young and hypervelocity stars in the Galactic Centre via tidal disruption of a molecular cloud

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-10-11, 13:26 authored by A Generozov, S Nayakshin, AM Madigan

The Milky Way Galaxy hosts a four million solar mass black hole, Sgr A*, that underwent a major accretion episode approximately 3–6 Myr ago. During the episode, hundreds of young massive stars formed in a disc orbiting Sgr A* in the central half parsec. The recent discovery of a hypervelocity star (HVS) S5-HVS1, ejected by Sgr A* five Myr ago with a velocity vector consistent with the disc, suggests that this event also produced binary star disruptions. The initial stellar disc has to be rather eccentric for this to occur. Such eccentric discs can form from the tidal disruptions of molecular clouds. Here, we perform simulations of such disruptions, focusing on gas clouds on rather radial initial orbits. As a result, stars formed in our simulations are on very eccentric orbits (⁠e¯∼0.6⁠) with a lopsided configuration. For some clouds, counterrotating stars are formed. As in previous work, we find that such discs undergo a secular gravitational instability that leads to a moderate number of particles obtaining eccentricities of 0.99 or greater, sufficient for stellar binary disruption. We also reproduce the mean eccentricity of the young disc in the Galactic Centre, though not the observed surface density profile. We discuss missing physics and observational biases that may explain this discrepancy. We conclude that observed S-stars, HVSs, and disc stars tightly constrain the initial cloud parameters, indicating a cloud mass between a few × 104 and 105M⊙⁠, and a velocity between ∼40 and 80 km s−1 at 10 pc.

Funding

Astrophysics Research at the University of Leicester

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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David and Lucile Packard Foundation

This work utilized resources from the University of Colorado Boulder Research Computing Group, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (awards ACI-1532235 and ACI-1532236), the University of Colorado Boulder, and Colorado State University

This work made use of the DiRAC Data Intensive service at Leicester, operated by the University of Leicester IT Services, which forms part of the STFC DiRAC HPC Facility (www.dirac.ac.uk)

History

Author affiliation

Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

512

Issue

3

Pagination

4100 - 4115 (16)

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Language

English