Pathways to massive black holes and compact star clusters in pre-galactic dark matter haloes with virial temperatures > 10000K
John A. Regan, Martin G. Haehnelt

TL;DR
This paper uses simulations to explore how gas in early dark matter haloes with high virial temperatures can rapidly form massive black holes or star clusters, potentially explaining the origins of supermassive black holes.
Contribution
It identifies conditions under which pre-galactic haloes favor the formation of massive black hole seeds through atomic cooling and angular momentum loss, highlighting a characteristic halo mass range.
Findings
Gas loses over 90% of angular momentum before rotational support.
Conditions favor rapid black hole seed formation in haloes with T_vir ~ 15000 K.
Massive black holes can grow to 10^5-10^6 solar masses quickly.
Abstract
Large dynamic range numerical simulations of atomic cooling driven collapse of gas in pre-galactic DM haloes with T_vir ~ 10000 K show that the gas loses 90% and more of its angular momentum before rotational support sets in. In a fraction of these haloes where the metallicity is low and UV radiation suppresses H_2 cooling, conditions are thus very favourable for the rapid build-up of massive black holes. Depending on the progression of metal enrichment, the continued suppression of H_2 cooling by external and internal UV radiation and the ability to trap the entropy produced by the release of gravitational energy, the gas at the centre of the halo is expected to form a supermassive star, a stellar-mass black hole accreting at super-Eddington accretion rates or a compact star-cluster undergoing collisional run-away of massive stars at its centre. In all three cases a massive black hole…
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