377 research outputs found
Formation of supermassive black hole seeds
The detection of quasars at unveils the presence of supermassive black
holes (BHs) of a few billion solar masses. The rapid formation process of these
extreme objects remains a fascinating and open issue. Such discovery implies
that seed black holes must have formed early on, and grown via either rapid
accretion or BH/galaxy mergers. In this theoretical review, we discuss in
detail various BH seed formation mechanisms and the physical processes at play
during their assembly. We discuss the three most popular BH formation
scenarios, involving the (i) core-collapse of massive stars, (ii) dynamical
evolution of dense nuclear star clusters, (iii) collapse of a protogalactic
metal free gas cloud. This article aims at giving a broad introduction and an
overview of the most advanced research in the field.Comment: Invited review accepted for publication in PASA, comments are still
welcom
Magnetic fields in primordial accretion disks
Magnetic fields are considered as a vital ingredient of contemporary star
formation, and may have been important during the formation of the first stars
in the presence of an efficient amplification mechanism. Initial seed fields
are provided via plasma fluctuations, and are subsequently amplified by the
small-scale dynamo, leading to a strong tangled magnetic field. Here we explore
how the magnetic field provided by the small-scale dynamo is further amplified
via the dynamo in a protostellar disk and assess its
implications. For this purpose, we consider two characteristic cases, a typical
Pop.~III star with ~M and an accretion rate of
~M~yr, and a supermassive star with ~M
and an accretion rate of ~M~yr. For the ~M
Pop.~III star, we find that coherent magnetic fields can be produced on scales
of at least ~AU, which are sufficient to drive a jet with a luminosity of
~L and a mass outflow rate of ~M~yr. For
the supermassive star, the dynamical timescales in its environment are even
shorter, implying smaller orbital timescales and an efficient magnetization out
to at least ~AU. The jet luminosity corresponds to
~L, and a mass outflow rate of
~M~yr. We expect that the feedback from the
supermassive star can have a relevant impact on its host galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, comments are
still welcom
Witnessing the birth of a supermassive protostar
The detection of quasars reveals the existence of supermassive
black holes of a few . One of the potential pathways to
explain their formation in the infant universe is the so-called direct collapse
model which provides massive seeds of . An isothermal
direct collapse mandates that halos should be of a primordial composition and
the formation of molecular hydrogen remains suppressed in the presence of a
strong Lyman Werner flux. In this study, we perform high resolution
cosmological simulations for two massive primordial halos employing a detailed
chemical model which includes cooling as well as realistic opacities
for both the bound-free emission and the Rayleigh scattering of
hydrogen atoms. We are able to resolve the collapse up to unprecedentedly high
densities of and to scales of about AU.
Our results show that the gas cools down to 5000 K in the presence
of cooling, and induces fragmentation at scales of about 8000 AU in
one of the two simulated halos, which may lead to the formation of a binary. In
addition, fragmentation also occurs on the AU scale in one of the halos but the
clumps are expected to merge on short time scales. Our results confirm that
cooling does not prevent the formation of a supermassive star and the
trapping of cooling radiation stabilises the collapse on small scales.Comment: Accpeted version, to appear in MNRAS, comments are still welcome and
high resolution version is available at
http://www2.iap.fr/users/latif/DCBH.pd
The chemical evolution of self-gravitating primordial disks
Numerical simulations show the formation of self-gravitating primordial disks
during the assembly of the first structures in the Universe, in particular
during the formation of Pop.~III and supermassive stars. Their subsequent
evolution is expected to be crucial to determine the mass scale of the first
cosmological objects, which depends on the temperature of the gas and the
dominant cooling mechanism. Here, we derive a one-zone framework to explore the
chemical evolution of such disks and show that viscous heating leads to the
collisional dissociation of an initially molecular gas. The effect is relevant
on scales of 10 AU (1000 AU) for a central mass of 10 M_sun (10^4 M_sun) at an
accretion rate of 10^{-1} M_sun yr^{-1}, and provides a substantial heat input
to stabilize the disk. If the gas is initially atomic, it remains atomic during
the further evolution, and the effect of viscous heating is less significant.
The additional thermal support is particularly relevant for the formation of
very massive objects, such as the progenitors of the first supermassive black
holes. The stabilizing impact of viscous heating thus alleviates the need for a
strong radiation background as a means of keeping the gas atomic.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 6 tables, accepted at A&
The birth of binary direct-collapse black holes
Supermassive primordial stars forming during catastrophic baryon collapse in
atomically-cooling halos at 15 - 20 may be the origin of the first
quasars in the universe. However, no simulation to date has followed the
evolution of these halos at resolutions that are high enough or for times that
are long enough to determine if collapse actually produces SMSs. Here we report
new cosmological simulations of baryon collapse in atomically-cooled halos for
times that are long enough for SMSs to form and die as direct-collapse black
holes (DCBHs). We find that the high infall rates required to build up such
stars do persist until the end of their lives and could fuel the rapid growth
of their BHs thereafter. Our simulations also demonstrate that binary and even
small multiples of SMSs can form in low-spin and high-spin halos, respectively.
This discovery raises the exciting prospect of detecting gravitational waves
from DCBH mergers with LISA and tidal disruption events in the near infrared
with the {\em James Webb Space Telescope} and ground-based telescopes in the
coming decade.Comment: Published in ApJL,
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/ab7c6
- …