The existence of "S-stars" within a distance of 1″ from Sgr A* contradicts our understanding of star formation, due to Sgr A* 's forbiddingly violent environment. A suggested possibility is that they form far away and were brought in by some fast dynamical process, since they are young. Nonetheless, all conjectured mechanisms either fail to reproduce their eccentricities-without violating their young age-or cannot explain the problem of "inverse mass segregation": the fact that lighter stars (the S-stars) are closer to Sgr A* and more massive ones, Wolf-Rayet (WR) and O-stars, are farther out. In this Letter we propose that the mechanism responsible for both the distribution of the eccentricities and the paucity of massive stars is the Kozai-Lidov-like resonance induced by a sub-parsec disk recently discovered in the Galactic center. Considering that the disk probably extended to a smaller radius in the past, we show that in as short as (a few) 106 yr, the stars populating the innermost 1″ region would redistribute in angular-momentum space and recover the observed "super-thermal" distribution. Meanwhile, WR and O-stars in the same region intermittently attain ample eccentricities that will lead to their tidal disruptions by the central massive black hole. Our results provide new evidences that Sgr A* was powered several millions years ago by an accretion disk as well as by tidal stellar disruptions. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, X., & Amaro-Seoane, P. (2014). A rapidly evolving region in the galactic center: Why S-stars thermalize and more massive stars are missing. Astrophysical Journal Letters, 786(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/786/2/L14
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