High-redshift formation and evolution of central massive objects II: The census of BH seeds
B. Devecchi, M. Volonteri, E. M. Rossi, M. Colpi, S. Portegies Zwart

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to investigate the formation and evolution of black hole seeds and nuclear star clusters at high redshifts, revealing how different formation pathways and feedback processes influence black hole occupation in halos over cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model tracking chemical, radiative, and mechanical feedback to study high-redshift BH seed formation from Population III stars and stellar collisions in nuclear clusters.
Findings
BH seeds appear as early as z~30 from Population III stars.
Most BHs form in dense nuclear clusters around z~15.
At z=0, halos above 10^11 M⊙ likely host a BH.
Abstract
We present results of simulations aimed at tracing the formation of nuclear star clusters (NCs) and black hole (BH) seeds, in a cosmological context. We focus on two mechanisms for the formation of BHs at high redshifts: as end-products of (1) Population III stars in metal free halos, and of (2) runaway stellar collisions in metal poor NCs. Our model tracks the chemical, radiative and mechanical feedback of stars on the baryonic component of the evolving halos. This procedure allows us to evaluate when and where the conditions for BH formation are met, and to trace the emergence of BH seeds arising from the dynamical channel, in a cosmological context. BHs start to appear already at z~30 as remnants of Population III stars. The efficiency of this mechanism begins decreasing once feedbacks become increasingly important. Around redshift z~15, BHs mostly form in the centre of mildly metal…
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