Fluctuations in the High-Redshift Lyman-Werner Background: Close Halo Pairs as the Origin of Supermassive Black Holes
Mark Dijkstra, Zoltan Haiman, Andrei Mesinger, Stuart Wyithe

TL;DR
This study models the fluctuations of the high-redshift Lyman-Werner background, revealing that rare close halo pairs experience intense radiation capable of enabling direct collapse black hole formation, potentially explaining supermassive black hole origins.
Contribution
It provides a probabilistic model of Lyman-Werner flux variations at high redshift, highlighting the role of close halo pairs in forming supermassive black holes.
Findings
Over 99% of halos experience near-average LW flux.
A tiny fraction of halos are exposed to extremely high LW flux.
Close halo pairs can facilitate direct collapse black hole formation.
Abstract
The earliest generation of stars and black holes must have established an early 'Lyman-Werner' background (LWB) at high redshift, prior to the epoch of reionization. Because of the long mean free path of photons with energies E<13.6 eV, the LWB was nearly uniform. However, some variation in the LWB is expected due to the discrete nature of the sources, and their highly clustered spatial distribution. In this paper, we compute the probability distribution function (PDF) of the LW flux that irradiates dark matter (DM) halos collapsing at high-redshift (z~10). Our model accounts for (i) the clustering of DM halos, (ii) Poisson fluctuations in the number of corresponding star forming galaxies, and (iii) scatter in the LW luminosity produced by halos of a given mass (calibrated using local observations). We find that > 99% of the DM halos are illuminated by a LW flux within a factor of 2 of…
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