Sowing black hole seeds: Direct collapse black hole formation with realistic Lyman-Werner radiation in cosmological simulations
Glenna Dunn, Jillian Bellovary, Kelly Holley-Bockelmann, Charlotte, Christensen, Thomas Quinn

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to explore how supermassive black hole seeds form via direct collapse, emphasizing the role of realistic, time-dependent Lyman-Werner radiation fields and environmental factors.
Contribution
It introduces the first self-consistent cosmological simulation of direct collapse black hole formation with dynamic Lyman-Werner radiation, analyzing the impact of critical flux thresholds on seed formation.
Findings
Lower $J_{crit}$ increases seed black hole abundance.
Black hole seeds mainly form in low-metallicity, star-forming halos.
Results challenge the atomic cooling halo pair scenario.
Abstract
We study the birth of supermassive black holes from the direct collapse process and characterize the sites where these black hole seeds form. In the pre-reionization epoch, molecular hydrogen (H) is an efficient coolant, causing gas to fragment and form Population III stars, but Lyman-Werner radiation can suppress H formation and allow gas to collapse directly into a massive black hole. The critical flux required to inhibit H formation, , is hotly debated, largely due to the uncertainties in the source radiation spectrum, H self-shielding, and collisional dissociation rates. Here, we test the power of the direct collapse model in a self-consistent, time-dependant, non-uniform Lyman-Werner radiation field -- the first time such has been done in a cosmological volume -- using an updated version of the SPH+N-body tree code Gasoline with H non-equilibrium…
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