# The formation of direct collapse black holes under the influence of   streaming velocities

**Authors:** Anna T. P. Schauer, John Regan, Simon C. O. Glover, Ralf S. Klessen

arXiv: 1705.02347 · 2017-09-06

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how high baryonic streaming velocities influence the formation of direct collapse black holes, finding that while they suppress small-scale structures, they may facilitate DCBH formation in specific halo environments.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that high streaming velocities alone do not cause DCBH formation but can create conditions favorable for DCBHs in synchronized halo pairs through UV radiation effects.

## Key findings

- High streaming velocities suppress minihalo formation.
- Large ACHs can still form and cool gas.
- High streaming velocities may enable DCBH formation in halo pairs.

## Abstract

We study the influence of a high baryonic streaming velocity on the formation of direct collapse black holes (DCBHs) with the help of cosmological simulations carried out using the moving mesh code {\sc arepo}. We show that a streaming velocity that is as large as three times the root-mean-squared value is effective at suppressing the formation of H$_{2}$-cooled minihaloes, while still allowing larger atomic cooling haloes (ACHs) to form. We find that enough H$_{2}$ forms in the centre of these ACHs to effectively cool the gas, demonstrating that a high streaming velocity by itself cannot produce the conditions required for DCBH formation. However, we argue that high streaming velocity regions do provide an ideal environment for the formation of DCBHs in close pairs of ACHs (the "synchronised halo" model). Due to the absence of star formation in minihaloes, the gas remains chemically pristine until the ACHs form. If two such haloes form with only a small separation in time and space, then the one forming stars earlier can provide enough ultraviolet radiation to suppress H$_{2}$ cooling in the other, allowing it to collapse to form a DCBH. Baryonic streaming may therefore play a crucial role in the formation of the seeds of the highest redshift quasars.

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.02347/full.md

## References

66 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.02347/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.02347