19–23 Aug 2024
Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland
Europe/Warsaw timezone

Do Intermediate-Mass Black Holes Exist in Galactic Globular Clusters? - Clues From X-ray Observations and Hydrodynamical Simulations

23 Aug 2024, 09:20
20m
Main Lecture Hall (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland)

Main Lecture Hall

Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland

Bartycka 18, 00-716 Warsaw Poland
Talk Chris Belczynski memorial session on compact objects and gravitational wave source Chris Belczynski memorial session on compact objects and gravitational wave sources

Speaker

Zhao Su (Nanjing University)

Description

Globular clusters (GCs) are thought to harbor the long-sought population of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs). We present a systematic search for a putative IMBH in 81 Milky Way GCs, based on archival {\it Chandra} X-ray observations. We find in only six GCs a significant X-ray source positionally coincident with the cluster center, which have 0.5--8 keV luminosities between $\sim1\times 10^{30}~{\rm erg~s^{-1}}$ to $\sim 4\times10^{33}~{\rm erg~s^{-1}}$. However, the spectral and temporal properties of these six sources can also be explained in terms of binary stars. The remaining 75 GCs do not have a detectable central source, most with $3\sigma$ upper limits ranging between $10^{29-32}~{\rm erg~s^{-1}}$ over 0.5--8 keV, which are significantly lower than predicted for canonical Bondi accretion. To help understand the feeble X-ray signature, we perform hydrodynamic simulations of stellar wind accretion onto a $1000~{\rm M_\odot}$ IMBH from the most-bound orbiting star, for stellar wind properties consistent with either a main-sequence (MS) star or an asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star. We find that the synthetic X-ray luminosity for the MS case ($\sim 10^{19}\rm~erg~s^{-1}$) is far below the current X-ray limits. The predicted X-ray luminosity for the AGB case ($\sim 10^{34}\rm~erg~s^{-1}$), on the other hand, is compatible with the detected central X-ray sources, in particular the ones in Terzan 5 and NGC 6652. However, the probability of having an AGB star as the most-bound star around the putative IMBH is very low. Our study strongly suggests that it is very challenging to detect the accretion-induced X-ray emission from IMBHs, even if they were prevalent in present-day GCs.

Affliation Nanjing Univeristy
Current Position PhD Student

Primary author

Zhao Su (Nanjing University)

Co-authors

Meicun Hou (Peking University) Mengfei Zhang (Zhejiang University) Zhiyuan Li (Nanjing University) Zhongqun Cheng (Wuhan University)

Presentation materials