Rapid growth of seed black holes during early bulge formation
Kohei Inayoshi, Riouhei Nakatani, Daisuke Toyouchi, Takashi Hosokawa,, Rolf Kuiper, and Masafusa Onoue

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that seed black holes in early protogalaxies can rapidly grow through efficient accretion driven by dense, metal-poor gas and bulge formation, potentially explaining the origins of supermassive black holes.
Contribution
The paper introduces axisymmetric radiation hydrodynamical simulations showing rapid seed black hole growth during early bulge formation in massive dark-matter halos at high redshift.
Findings
Seed BHs can increase tenfold in mass within 2 Myr under certain conditions.
Rapid accretion is regulated by ionizing radiation-driven outflows.
Overmassive black holes may be detectable at z~15 with upcoming telescopes.
Abstract
We study the early growth of massive seed black holes (BHs) via accretion in protogalactic nuclei where the stellar bulge component is assembled, performing axisymmetric two-dimensional radiation hydrodynamical simulations. We find that when a seed BH with is embedded in dense metal-poor gas () with a density of and bulge stars with a total mass of , a massive gaseous disk feeds the BH efficiently at rates of and the BH mass increases nearly tenfold within Myr. This rapid accretion phase lasts until a good fraction of the gas bounded within the bulge accretes onto the BH, although the feeding rate is regulated owing to strong outflows driven by ionizing radiation emitted from the accreting BH. The transient growing mode can be triggered…
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