A new channel to form IMBHs throughout cosmic time
Priyamvada Natarajan (Yale University)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a gas accretion mechanism in dense nuclear star clusters that can rapidly form intermediate mass black holes throughout cosmic history, explaining observed black hole populations and predicting many wandering black holes.
Contribution
It introduces a new gas accretion driven pathway for black hole growth in nuclear star clusters, filling the mass gap and accounting for observed IMBHs across cosmic time.
Findings
Supra-exponential accretion can grow stellar remnants into IMBHs.
Growth is regulated by gas supply, leading to a range of black hole masses.
Predicted population includes wandering black holes detectable via TDEs and GWs.
Abstract
While the formation of the first black holes at high redshift is reasonably well understood though debated, massive black hole formation at later cosmic epochs has not been adequately explored. We present a gas accretion driven mechanism that can build up black hole masses rapidly in dense, gas-rich nuclear star clusters (NSCs). Wind-fed supra-exponential accretion of an initially wandering black hole in NSCs can lead to extremely fast growth, scaling stellar mass remnant seed black holes up to intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs). Operating throughout cosmic time, growth via this new channel is modulated by the gas supply, and premature termination results in the formation of lower mass black holes with masses in the range of 50 - few 100 solar masses, filling in the so-called mass gap. However, in most gas-rich NSCs, growth is unimpeded, inevitably leading to the formation of IMBHs…
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