Angular Momentum Transfer and Lack of Fragmentation in Self-Gravitating Accretion Flows
Mitchell Begelman, Isaac Shlosman (JILA/CU Boulder)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that angular momentum transfer in self-gravitating accretion flows suppresses fragmentation, enabling direct collapse into supermassive black holes without star formation, especially in turbulent, thick disks.
Contribution
It introduces a turbulence-regulated flow model where angular momentum transfer prevents fragmentation, facilitating black hole formation without star cluster intermediaries.
Findings
Flow stability is maintained against fragmentation due to efficient J transfer.
Turbulence decay triggers global instabilities, sustaining turbulence.
Fragmentation likelihood decreases with higher Mach numbers and efficient J redistribution.
Abstract
Rapid inflows associated with early galaxy formation lead to the accumulation of self-gravitating gas in the centers of proto-galaxies. Such gas accumulations are prone to non-axisymmetric instabilities, as in the well-known Maclaurin sequence of rotating ellipsoids, which are accompanied by a catastrophic loss of angular momentum (J). Self-gravitating gas is also intuitively associated with star formation. However, recent simulations of the infall process display highly turbulent continuous flows. We propose that J-transfer, which enables the inflow, also suppresses fragmentation. Inefficient J loss by the gas leads to decay of turbulence, triggering global instabilities and renewed turbulence driving. Flow regulated in this way is stable against fragmentation, whilst staying close to the instability threshold for bar formation -- thick self-gravitating disks are prone to global…
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