Early Black Holes in Cosmological Simulations: Luminosity Functions and Clustering Behaviour
Colin DeGraf, Tiziana Di Matteo, Nishikanta Khandai, Rupert Croft,, Julio Lopez, Volker Springel

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to predict high-redshift quasar luminosity functions and clustering, aligning well with observations and providing forecasts for upcoming surveys.
Contribution
Introduces a new hydrodynamic simulation model that accurately reproduces observed quasar luminosity functions and predicts quasar counts and clustering at high redshift.
Findings
Model reproduces Sloan QLF at z >= 5 within observational constraints.
High-z QLF consistent with redshift-independent BH occupation distribution.
Predicted quasar counts for upcoming surveys like CANDELS.
Abstract
We examine predictions for the quasar luminosity functions (QLF) and quasar clustering at high redshift (z > 4.75) using MassiveBlack, our new hydrodynamic cosmological simulation which includes a self-consistent model for black hole growth and feedback. We show that the model reproduces the Sloan QLF within observational constraints at z >= 5. We find that the high-z QLF is consistent with a redshift-independent occupation distribution of BHs among dark matter halos (which we provide) such that the evolution of the QLF follows that of the halo mass function. The sole exception is the bright-end at z=6 and 7, where BHs in high-mass halos tend to be unusually bright due to extended periods of Eddington growth caused by high density cold flows into the halo center. We further use these luminosity functions to make predictions for the number density of quasars in upcoming surveys,…
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