Evolution of high-redshift quasar hosts and promotion of massive black hole seed formation
Wenxiu Li, Kohei Inayoshi, Yu Qiu

TL;DR
This paper explores how massive black hole seeds form in the early universe through gas collapse in high-redshift quasar host progenitors, highlighting the roles of radiation, mergers, and streaming motions in delaying star formation and enabling direct collapse.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the conditions leading to isothermal gas collapse in early universe halos, emphasizing the impact of streaming velocities and metal enrichment on black hole seed formation.
Findings
14% of merger tree realizations undergo isothermal collapse
Gas accretion rates range from 3e-3 to 5 solar masses per year
Potential for massive black hole seed formation and gravitational wave sources
Abstract
High-redshift luminous quasars powered by accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) with mass constrain their formation pathways. We investigate the formation of heavy seeds of SMBHs through gas collapse in the quasar host progenitors, using merger trees to trace the halo growth in highly-biased, overdense regions of the universe. The progenitor halos are likely irradiated by intense H-photodissociating radiation from nearby star-forming galaxies and heat the interior gas by successive mergers. The kinetic energy of the gas originating from mergers as well as baryonic streaming motion prevents gas collapse and delays prior star formation. With a streaming velocity higher than the root-mean-square value, gas clouds in nearly all realizations of merger trees enter the atomic-cooling stage and begin to collapse isothermally with via…
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