Wandering Supermassive Black Holes in Milky Way Mass Halos [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1802.06783


We present a self-consistent prediction from large-scale cosmological simulations for the population of `wandering’ supermassive black holes of mass greater than $10^6$ M$_{\odot}$ on long-lived, kpc-scale orbits within MW-mass galaxies. We extract a sample of Milky Way (MW)-mass halos from the Romulus25 cosmological simulation (Tremmel et al. 2017), which is uniquely able to capture the orbital evolution of SMBHs during and following galaxy mergers. We predict that such halos, regardless of recent merger history or morphology, host an average of $5.1 \pm 3.3$ SMBHs, including their central black hole, within 10 kpc from the galactic center and an average of $12.2 \pm 8.4$ SMBHs total within their virial radius, not counting those in satellite halos. Wandering SMBHs exist within their host galaxies for several Gyrs, often accreted by their host halo in the early Universe. We find, with $>4\sigma$ significance, that wandering SMBHs are preferentially found outside of galactic disks.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Tremmel, F. Governato, M. Volonteri, et. al.
Wed, 21 Feb 18
33/58

Comments: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to ApJ Letters