The cosmic history of Primordial Black Hole accretion and its uncertainties
Pratibha Jangra, Daniele Gaggero, Bradley J. Kavanagh, J. M. Diego

TL;DR
This paper investigates the growth of primordial black holes through accretion in the early universe, highlighting significant uncertainties in accretion models and their implications for black hole evolution and dark matter.
Contribution
It compares traditional and refined accretion models, revealing how feedback and parameter sensitivities affect PBH mass growth predictions.
Findings
PBHs > 100 M_sun can grow significantly in certain conditions
Radiation feedback can suppress baryonic accretion drastically
Accretion rate depends heavily on model parameters and assumptions
Abstract
Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) have not been experimentally detected so far, but their existence would provide important insights about the early Universe and serve as one of the possible candidates of dark matter (DM). In this work, we explore the accretion of radiation and matter by PBHs, with relevance for the growth of PBH seeds to form early Supermassive Black Holes; the emission from accreting PBHs; and constraints from gravitational wave observations, among others. We study the growth of PBH masses in the early Universe due to the accretion of radiation, highlighting uncertainties which arise from estimates of the PBH formation time. For baryonic accretion, we review the traditional Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton (BHL) and its refined version known as the Park-Ricotti (PR) model, which also includes radiative feedback. We find that in the BHL model, PBHs heavier than $\sim 100…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · History and Theory of Mathematics
