Ubiquitous seeding of supermassive black holes by direct collapse
Bhaskar Agarwal, Sadegh Khochfar, Jarrett L. Johnson, Eyal Neistein,, Claudio Dalla Vecchia, Mario Livio

TL;DR
This study models the environment of direct collapse black hole seeds in the early universe, highlighting the importance of local Lyman Werner radiation and predicting their detectability with JWST.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model incorporating local LW radiation variations and metal pollution effects, advancing understanding of supermassive black hole seed formation at high redshift.
Findings
Local LW radiation can be up to 10^6 times the average background.
Steady increase in DCBH formation rate from z=12 to z=6.
DCBH-hosting haloes are more clustered than non-hosting haloes.
Abstract
We study for the first time the environment of massive black hole (BH) seeds (~10^4-5 Msun) formed via the direct collapse of pristine gas clouds in massive haloes (>10^7 Msun) at z>6. Our model is based on the evolution of dark matter haloes within a cosmological N-body simulation, combined with prescriptions for the formation of BH along with both Pop III and Pop II stars. We calculate the spatially-varying intensity of Lyman Werner (LW) radiation from stars and identify the massive pristine haloes in which it is high enough to shut down molecular hydrogen cooling. In contrast to previous BH seeding models with a spatially constant LW background, we find that the intensity of LW radiation due to local sources, J_local, can be up to 10^6 times the spatially averaged background in the simulated volume and exceeds the critical value, J_crit, for the complete suppression of molecular…
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