Direct formation of supermassive black holes in metal-enriched gas at the heart of high-redshift galaxy mergers
Lucio Mayer (1), Davide Fiacconi (1), Silvia Bonoli (2), Thomas Quinn, (3), Rok Roskar (4), Sijing Shen (5), James Wadsley (6) ((1) ICS, Zurich, (2), CEFCA, Teruel, (3) University of Washington, (4) ETH, Zurich, (5) IoA,, Cambridge, (6) McMaster, Hamilton)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution 3D simulations to demonstrate how metal-enriched gas in high-redshift galaxy mergers can directly collapse into supermassive black holes, explaining early quasars and predicting detectable gravitational waves.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation evidence that metal-enriched gas can directly form supermassive black holes during galaxy mergers at high redshift.
Findings
Formation of a dense, optically thick nuclear disk during mergers.
Rapid accretion of gas leading to supermassive core within tens of thousands of years.
Potential gravitational wave signals detectable by eLISA.
Abstract
We present novel 3D multi-scale SPH simulations of gas-rich galaxy mergers between the most massive galaxies at , designed to scrutinize the direct collapse formation scenario for massive black hole seeds proposed in \citet{mayer+10}. The simulations achieve a resolution of 0.1 pc, and include both metallicity-dependent optically-thin cooling and a model for thermal balance at high optical depth. We consider different formulations of the SPH hydrodynamical equations, including thermal and metal diffusion. When the two merging galaxy cores collide, gas infall produces a compact, optically thick nuclear disk with densities exceeding g cm. The disk rapidly accretes higher angular momentum gas from its surroundings reaching pc and a mass of in only a few yr. Outside pc it fragments into massive clumps.…
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