Light or heavy supermassive black hole seeds: the role of internal rotation in the fate of supermassive stars
Davide Fiacconi (1), Elena M. Rossi (2) ((1) ICS, University of, Zurich, (2) Leiden Observatory, University of Leiden)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how internal rotation affects the formation and growth of supermassive black hole seeds within quasi-stars, revealing conditions that either enable or hinder black hole development in early galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a model for angular momentum redistribution in quasi-stars, showing how rotation influences black hole seed formation and suggesting a dual population of black hole seeds based on host halo mass.
Findings
Highly sub-keplerian core motion prevents gas circularisation outside the horizon.
Massive quasi-stars can sustain growth, while less massive ones are short-lived.
Potential dual black hole seed populations in different halo environments.
Abstract
Supermassive black holes are a key ingredient of galaxy evolution. However, their origin is still highly debated. In one of the leading formation scenarios, a black hole of M results from the collapse of the inner core of a supermassive star ( M), created by the rapid accumulation ( M yr) of pristine gas at the centre of newly formed galaxies at . The subsequent evolution is still speculative: the remaining gas in the supermassive star can either directly plunge into the nascent black hole, or part of it can form a central accretion disc, whose luminosity sustains a surrounding, massive, and nearly hydrostatic envelope (a system called a "quasi-star"). To address this point, we consider the effect of rotation on a quasi-star, as angular momentum is inevitably transported towards the galactic nucleus…
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