Issue |
A&A
Volume 437, Number 2, July II 2005
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 437 - 445 | |
Section | Galactic structure, stellar clusters, and populations | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20042052 | |
Published online | 21 June 2005 |
A self-gravitating accretion disk in Sgr A* a few million years ago: Is Sgr A* a failed quasar?
Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str.1, 85741 Garching, Germany e-mail: serg@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Received:
22
September
2004
Accepted:
3
March
2005
Sgr A* is extra-ordinarily dim in all wavelengths requiring
a very low accretion rate at the present time. However, at a radial
distance of a fraction of a parsec from Sgr A*, two rings populated by
young massive stars suggest a recent burst of star formation in a
rather hostile environment. Here we explore two ways of creating such
young stellar rings with a gaseous accretion disk: by self-gravity in
a massive disk, and by capturing “old” low mass stars and growing
them via gas accretion in a disk. The minimum disk mass is above for the first mechanism and is few tens of times larger for the
second one. The observed relatively small velocity dispersion of the
stars rules out disks more massive than around
: heavier
stellar or gas disks would warp each other too strongly by orbital
precession in an axisymmetric potential. The capture of “old” stars
by a disk is thus unlikely as the origin of the young stellar
disks. The absence of a massive nuclear gas disk in Sgr A* now implies
that the disk was either accreted by the SMBH, which would then imply
almost a quasar-like luminosity for Sgr A*, or was consumed in the star
formation episode. The latter possibility appears to be more likely
on theoretical grounds. We also consider whether accretion disk plane
changes, expected to occur due to fluctuations in the angular momentum
of gas infalling into the central parsec of a galaxy, would dislodge
the embedded stars from the disk midplane. We find that the stars
leave the disk midplane only if the disk orientation changes on time
scales much shorter than the disk viscous time.
Key words: accretion, accretion disks / black hole physics / Galaxy: center / stars: formation
© ESO, 2005
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