How Overmassive Black Holes Formed at Cosmic Dawn
Muhammad A. Latif, Daniel J. Whalen, Sadegh Khochfar, Fergus Cullen

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that overmassive black holes observed in early galaxies can originate from direct collapse black holes in primordial halos, with simulations matching observed properties of such galaxies at high redshift.
Contribution
First simulation to track coevolution of a direct collapse black hole and its host galaxy over several hundred million years, explaining their high black hole to stellar mass ratios.
Findings
OBGs form from early DCBH birth in primordial halos.
Simulated black hole growth reaches 6 million solar masses by z=10.
Model spectra match observed high-redshift galaxy spectra.
Abstract
Overmassive black hole galaxies (OBGs) at redshifts 10, or 450 Myr after the Big Bang, are one of the most puzzling discoveries by the James Webb Space Telescope to date because they formed by such early epochs and their black-hole to stellar mass ratios are a hundred times higher than those in galaxies today. Here we show that OBGs are simply the result of DCBH birth in primordial halos at early times. A 70,000 M DCBH forming at 25.7 in our cosmological simulation grows at about half the Eddington rate to M by 10.1. Its host galaxy reaches a stellar mass of M, a metallicity 0.1 Z, a star formation rate of 2 M yr, and 0.01, on par with OBGs like GN-z11, UHZ1, and GHZ9 at 10.6, 10.1, and 10.2, respectively. Our simulation, the first to…
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