Overmassive black holes in the early Universe can be explained by gas-rich, dark matter-dominated galaxies
William McClymont, Sandro Tacchella, Xihan Ji, Rahul Kannan, Roberto Maiolino, Charlotte Simmonds, Aaron Smith, Ewald Puchwein, Enrico Garaldi, Mark Vogelsberger, Francesco D'Eugenio, Laura Keating, Xuejian Shen, Bartolomeo Trefoloni, Oliver Zier

TL;DR
This study explains the presence of overmassive black holes in early Universe galaxies by linking them to gas-rich, dark matter-dominated galaxies, using simulations and observational data to support the fundamental $M_{BH}$-$M_{dyn}$ relation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that overmassive black holes naturally arise from a fundamental $M_{BH}$-$M_{dyn}$ relation in gas-rich, dark matter-dominated galaxies at high redshift, supported by simulations and JWST data.
Findings
Overmassive black holes are common in low-mass, high-redshift galaxies.
The $M_{BH}/M_*$ ratio declines with stellar mass, from 0.1 to 0.01.
Gas and dark matter fractions drive the overmassive black hole phenomenon.
Abstract
JWST has revealed the apparent evolution of the black hole (BH)-stellar mass (-M_\rm{\ast}) relation in the early Universe, while remaining consistent with the BH-dynamical mass (-) relation. We predict BH masses for galaxies in the high-resolution THESAN-ZOOM simulations by assuming the - relation is fundamental. Even without live BH modelling, our approach reproduces the JWST-observed distribution, including overmassive BHs relative to the local - relation. We find that declines with , evolving from 0.1 at to 0.01 at . This trend reflects the dark matter () and gas fractions (),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
