Supermassive Black Hole Seed Formation at High Redshifts: Long-Term Evolution of the Direct Collapse
Isaac Shlosman (UK Lexington, USA, and Theoretical Astrophysics, Osaka, University, Japan), Jun-Hwan Choi (University of Texas at Austin), Mitchell, C. Begelman (JILA, CU Boulder), Kentaro Nagamine (Theoretical, Astrophysics, Osaka University, Japan

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to explore how supermassive black hole seeds form and evolve at high redshifts through direct gas collapse, revealing key processes and disk structures that support rapid SMBH growth.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility of SMBH seed formation via direct collapse, detailing the long-term evolution and disk dynamics with high-resolution cosmological simulations.
Findings
Central seed grows to ~2 million solar masses in 2 Myr.
No fragmentation detected during collapse.
Formation of misaligned inner and outer disks.
Abstract
We use cosmological adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) code Enzo zoom-in simulations to study the long term evolution of the collapsing gas within dark matter (DM) halos at high redshifts. This direct collapse process is a leading candidate for rapid formation of supermassive black hole (SMBH) seeds at high z. To circumvent the Courant condition at small radii, we have used the sink particle method, and focus on the evolution on scales ~0.01-10 pc. The collapse proceeds in two stages, with the secondary runaway happening within the central 10 pc, and with no detected fragmentation. The sink particles form when the collapsing gas requires additional refinement of the grid size at the highest refinement level. Their mass never exceeds ~10^3 Mo, with the sole exception of the central seed which grows dramatically to ~ 2 x 10^6 Mo in ~2 Myr, confirming the feasibility of this path to the SMBH.…
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