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Negative Dynamical Friction on compact objects moving through dense gas

An over-dense wake is created by a gravitating object moving through a gaseous medium, and this wake pulls back on the object and slows it down. This is conventional dynamical friction in a gaseous medium. We argue that if the object drives a sufficiently powerful outflow, the wake is destroyed and instead an extended under-dense region is created behind the object. In this case the overall gravitational force is applied in the direction of the object's motion, producing a negative dynamical friction (NDF). Black holes in dense gas drive powerful outflows and may experience the NDF, although extensive numerical work is probably needed to demonstrate or refute this conclusively. NDF may be important for stellar-mass black holes and neutron stars inside `common envelopes' in binary systems, for stellar mass black holes inside AGN discs, or for massive black holes growing through super-Eddington accretion in early Universe.

preprint2019arXivOpen access
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