Growth of high redshift supermassive black holes from heavy seeds in the BRAHMA cosmological simulations: Implications of overmassive black holes
Aklant K Bhowmick, Laura Blecha, Paul Torrey, Rachel S Somerville,, Luke Zoltan Kelley, Mark Vogelsberger, Rainer Weinberger, Lars Hernquist,, Aneesh Sivasankaran

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how heavy seed black holes grow in the early universe, examining the impact of different formation conditions on their mass relations and growth pathways.
Contribution
It introduces systematic variations of direct collapse black hole seed models in simulations to analyze high-redshift black hole growth and their mass relations.
Findings
High-z BH growth is merger dominated with limited gas accretion.
Restrictive seed formation criteria lead to under-massive black holes compared to observations.
Less restrictive models can reproduce observed overmassive black hole relations.
Abstract
JWST has recently revealed a large population of accreting black holes (BHs) in the early Universe. Even after accounting for possible systematic biases, the high-z relation derived from these objects by Pacucci et al. (2023 P23 relation) is above the local scaling relation by . To understand the implications of potentially overmassive high-z BH populations, we study the BH growth at using the BRAHMA suite of cosmological simulations with systematic variations of heavy seed models that emulate direct collapse black hole (DCBH) formation. In our least restrictive seed model, we place seeds in halos with sufficient dense and metal-poor gas. To model conditions for direct collapse, we impose additional criteria based on a minimum Lyman Werner flux (LW flux ), maximum gas spin, and an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
