4.7 Article

Extreme mass ratio inspirals and tidal disruption events in nuclear clusters - I. Time-dependent rates

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 514, Issue 3, Pages 3270-3284

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac1453

Keywords

black hole physics; gravitational waves; methods: numerical; galaxies: nuclei

Funding

  1. European Union [818691]

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This paper presents a computationally efficient approach to study tidal disruption events, extreme mass ratio inspirals, and direct plunges occurring around massive black holes in galactic nuclei. The study finds that the event rates decline with time and provides a simple scaling method to reproduce the time-dependent event rates. The results warn against using steady-state models and call for a more sophisticated, time-dependent treatment of the problem.
In this paper, we develop a computationally efficient, two-population, time-dependent Fokker-Plank approach in the two dimensions of energy and angular momentum to study the rates of tidal disruption events (TDEs), extreme mass ratio inspirals (EMRIs), and direct plunges occurring around massive black holes (MBHs) in galactic nuclei. We test our code by exploring a wide range of the astrophysically relevant parameter space, including MBH masses, galaxy central densities, and inner density slopes. We find that mass segregation and, more in general, the time dependency of the distribution function regulate the event rate: TDEs always decline with time, whereas EMRIs and plunges reach a maximum and undergo a subsequent nearly exponential decay. Once suitably normalized, the rates associated to different choices of MBH mass and galaxy density overlap nearly perfectly. Based on this, we provide a simple scaling that allows to reproduce the time-dependent event rates for any MBH mass and underlying galactic nucleus. Although our peak rates are in general agreement with the literature relying on the steady-state (non-time-dependent) assumption, those can be sustained on a time-scale that strongly depends on the properties of the system. In particular, this can be much shorter than a Gyr for relatively light MBHs residing in dense systems. This warns against using steady-state models to compute global TDE, EMRI, and plunge rates and calls for a more sophisticated, time-dependent treatment of the problem.

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