Direct Collapse to Supermassive Black Hole Seeds with Radiation Transfer: Cosmological Halos
Kazem Ardaneh (1), Yang Luo (1, 2), Isaac Shlosman (1, 2),, Kentaro Nagamine (1, 3, 4), John H. Wise (5), Mitchell C. Begelman (6), ((1) Osaka University, (2) University of Kentucky, (3) University of Nevada,, (4) Kavli IPMU, University of Tokyo

TL;DR
This study models the direct collapse of primordial gas in dark matter halos with radiative transfer, showing it promotes supermassive black hole seed formation by preventing fragmentation and inducing outflows, contrasting adiabatic models.
Contribution
It introduces high-resolution cosmological simulations with radiative transfer in the flux-limited diffusion approximation, revealing new insights into SMBH seed formation mechanisms.
Findings
Radiative transfer prevents fragmentation and star formation.
Central object reaches ~10 solar masses with high luminosity.
Radiation-driven outflows enhance mass accumulation at small scales.
Abstract
We have modeled direct collapse of a primordial gas within dark matter halos in the presence of radiative transfer, in high-resolution zoom-in simulations in a cosmological framework, down to the formation of the photosphere and the central object. Radiative transfer has been implemented in the flux-limited diffusion (FLD) approximation. Adiabatic models were run for comparison. We find that (a) the FLD flow forms an irregular central structure and does not exhibit fragmentation, contrary to adiabatic flow which forms a thick disk, driving a pair of spiral shocks, subject to Kelvin-Helmholtz shear instability forming fragments; (b) the growing central core in the FLD flow quickly reaches ~10 Mo and a highly variable luminosity of 10^{38}-10^{39} erg/s, comparable to the Eddington luminosity. It experiences massive recurrent outflows driven by radiation force and thermal pressure…
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