34 research outputs found
Probing the growth of supermassive black holes at z>6 with LOFAR
HII regions surrounding supermassive black holes (BHs) in an otherwise still
neutral intergalactic medium (IGM) are likely to be the most easily detectable
sources by future 21cm experiments like LOFAR. We have made predictions for the
size distribution of such HII regions for several physically motivated models
for BH growth at high redshift and compared this to the expected LOFAR
sensitivity to these sources. The number of potentially detectable HII regions
does not only depend on the ionisation state of the intergalactic medium and
the decoupling of the spin temperature of the neutral hydrogen from the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) temperature, but is also strongly sensitive to the
rate of growth of BHs at high redshift. If the supermassive BHs at redshift 6
were built up via continuous Eddington-limited accretion from low mass seed BHs
at high redshift, then LOFAR is not expected to detect isolated QSO HII regions
at redshifts much larger than 6, and only if the IGM is still significantly
neutral. If the high-redshift growth of BHs starts with massive seed BHs and is
driven by short-lived accretion events following the merging of BH hosting
galaxies then the detection of HII regions surrounding supermassive BHs may
extend to redshifts as large as 8-9 but is still very sensitive to the redshift
to which the IGM remains significantly neutral. The most optimistic predictions
are for a model where the supermassive BHs at z>6 have grown slowly. HII
regions around supermassive BHs may then be detected to significantly larger
redshifts.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Realistic Event Rates for Detection of Supermassive Black Hole Coalescence by LISA
The gravitational waves generated during supermassive black hole (SMBH)
coalescence are prime candidates for detection by the satellite LISA. We use
the extended Press-Schechter formalism combined with empirically motivated
estimates for the SMBH--dark matter halo mass relation and SMBH occupation
fraction to estimate the maximum coalescence rate for major SMBH mergers.
Assuming efficient binary coalescence, and guided by the lowest nuclear black
hole mass inferred in local galactic bulges and nearby low-luminosity active
galactic nuclei (10^5 Msun) we predict approximately 15 detections per year at
a signal to noise greater than five, in each of the inspiral and ringdown
phases. Rare coalescences between SMBHs having masses in excess of 10^7 Msun
will be more readily detected via gravitational waves from the ringdown phase.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Detecting quasars at very high redshift with next generation X-ray telescopes
The next generation of X-ray telescopes have the potential to detect faint
quasars at very high redshift and probe the early growth of massive black holes
(BHs). We present modelling of the evolution of the optical and X-ray AGN
luminosity function at 2 < z < 6 based on a CDM merger-driven model for the
triggering of nuclear activity combined with a variety of fading laws. We
extrapolate the merger-driven models to z > 6 for a range of BH growth
scenarios. We predict significant numbers of sources at z ~ 6 with fluxes just
an order of magnitude below the current detection limits and thus detectable
with XEUS and Constellation-X, relatively independently of the fading law
chosen. The predicted number of sources at even higher redshift depends
sensitively on the early growth history of BHs. For passive evolution models in
which BHs grow constantly at their Eddington limit, detectable BHs may be rare
beyond z ~ 10 even with Generation-X. However, in the more probable scenario
that BH growth at z > 6 can be described by passive evolution with a small duty
cycle, or by our merger driven accretion model, then we predict that XEUS and
Generation-X will detect significant numbers of black holes out to z ~ 10 and
perhaps beyond.Comment: 18 pages, 11 Figures. Version accepted to MNRAS; extra data plotted,
XEUS and Con-X sensitivities corrected and predictions amended accordingl
Testing general relativity and probing the merger history of massive black holes with LISA
Observations of binary inspirals with LISA will allow us to place bounds on
alternative theories of gravity and to study the merger history of massive
black holes (MBH). These possibilities rely on LISA's parameter estimation
accuracy. We update previous studies of parameter estimation including
non-precessional spin effects. We work both in Einstein's theory and in
alternative theories of gravity of the scalar-tensor and massive-graviton
types. Inclusion of non-precessional spin terms in MBH binaries has little
effect on the angular resolution or on distance determination accuracy, but it
degrades the estimation of the chirp mass and reduced mass by between one and
two orders of magnitude. The bound on the coupling parameter of scalar-tensor
gravity is significantly reduced by the presence of spin couplings, while the
reduction in the graviton-mass bound is milder. LISA will measure the
luminosity distance of MBHs to better than ~10% out to z~4 for a (10^6+10^6)
Msun binary, and out to z~2 for a (10^7+10^7) Msun binary. The chirp mass of a
MBH binary can always be determined with excellent accuracy. Ignoring spin
effects, the reduced mass can be measured within ~1% out to z=10 and beyond for
a (10^6+10^6) Msun binary, but only out to z~2 for a (10^7+10^7) Msun binary.
Present-day MBH coalescence rate calculations indicate that most detectable
events should originate at z~2-6: at these redshifts LISA can be used to
measure the two black hole masses and their luminosity distance with sufficient
accuracy to probe the merger history of MBHs. If the low-frequency LISA noise
can only be trusted down to 10^-4 Hz, parameter estimation for MBHs (and LISA's
ability to perform reliable cosmological observations) will be significantly
degraded.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Proceedings of GWDAW 9. Matches version accepted
in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Blazars in the early Universe
We investigate the relative occurrence of radio--loud and radio-quiet quasars
in the first billion years of the Universe, powered by black holes heavier than
one billion solar masses. We consider the sample of high-redshfit blazars
detected in the hard X-ray band in the 3-years all sky survey performed by the
Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) onboard the Swift satellite. All the black holes
powering these blazars exceed a billion solar mass, with accretion luminosities
close to the Eddington limit. For each blazar pointing at us, there must be
hundreds of similar sources (having black holes of similar masses) pointing
elsewhere. This puts constraints on the density of billion solar masses black
holes at high redshift (z>4), and on the relative importance of (jetted)
radio-loud vs radio-quiet sources. We compare the expected number of high
redshift radio--loud sources with the high luminosity radio-loud quasars
detected in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), finding agreement up to z~3,
but a serious deficit at z>3 of SDSS radio-loud quasars with respect to the
expectations. We suggest that the most likely explanations for this
disagreement are: i) the ratio of blazar to misaligned radio-sources decreases
by an order of magnitude above z=3, possibly as a result of a decrease of the
average bulk Lorentz factor; ii) the SDSS misses a large fraction of radio-loud
sources at high redshifts, iii) the SDSS misses both radio-loud and radio-quiet
quasars at high redshift, possibly because of obscuration or because of
collimation of the optical-UV continuum in systems accreting near Eddington.
These explanations imply very different number density of heavy black holes at
high redshifts, that we discuss in the framework of the current ideas about the
relations of dark matter haloes at high redshifts and the black hole they host.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Heating of the Intergalactic Medium by Primordial Miniquasars
A simple analytical model is used to calculate the X-ray heating of the IGM
for a range of black hole masses. This process is efficient enough to decouple
the spin temperature of the intergalactic medium from the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) temperature and produce a differential brightness temperature
of the order of out to distances as large as a few
co-moving Mpc, depending on the redshift, black hole mass and lifetime. We
explore the influence of two types of black holes, those with and without
ionising UV radiation. The results of the simple analytical model are compared
to those of a full spherically symmetric radiative transfer code. Two simple
scenarios are proposed for the formation and evolution of black hole mass
density in the Universe. The first considers an intermediate mass black hole
that form as an end-product of Population III stars, whereas the second
considers super-massive black holes that form directly through the collapse of
massive halos with low spin parameter. These scenarios are shown not to violate
any of the observational constraints, yet produce enough X-ray photons to
decouple the spin-temperature from that of the CMB. This is an important issue
for future high redshift 21 cm observations.Comment: Replaced with a revised version to match the MNRAS accepted versio
Time-evolution of ionization and heating around first stars and miniquasars
A one dimensional radiative transfer code is developed to track the
ionization and heating pattern around the first miniquasars and Population III
stars. The code follows the evolution of the ionization of the species of
hydrogen and helium and the intergalactic medium temperature profiles as a
function of redshift. The radiative transfer calculations show that the
ionization signature of the first miniquasars and stars is very similar yet the
heating pattern around the two is very different. Furthermore, the first
massive miniquasars (~>10^5 M_{sun}) do produce large ionized bubbles around
them, which can potentially be imaged directly using future radio telescopes.
It is also shown that the ionized bubbles not only stay ionized for
considerable time after the switching off of the source, but continue to expand
for a short while due to secondary collisions prompted by the X-ray part of
their spectra. Varying spectral shapes also produced sizable variations in
ionized fraction and temperature profile. We also compare the radiative
transfer results with the analytical approximation usually adopted for heating
by miniquasars and find that, because of the inadequate treatment of the He
species, the analytical approach leads to an underestimation of the temperature
in the outer radii by a factor ~5. Population III stars - with masses in the
range of 10 - 1000 M_{sun} and modelled as blackbodies at a temperature of
50000 K - are found to be efficient in ionizing their surroundings.
Observational effects on the 21 cm brightness temperature, the thermal and
kinetic Sunyaev-Ze'ldovich effects, are also studied in the context of the
upcoming radio and microwave telescopes like LOFAR and SPT.Comment: 19 pages, 24 figures, accepted to be published in MNRAS Typos in
formula 1,2 and 21 fixed. Figure 11 caption and Figure 13 change
Gravitational recoil: effects on massive black hole occupation fraction over cosmic time
We assess the influence of massive black hole (MBH) ejections from galaxy
centres, due to the gravitational radiation recoil, along the cosmic merger
history of the MBH population. We discuss the 'danger' of the recoil for MBHs
as a function of different MBH spin/orbit configurations and of the host halo
cosmic bias, and on how that reflects on the 'occupation fraction' of MBHs. We
assess ejection probabilities for mergers occurring in a gas-poor environment,
where the MBH binary coalescence is driven by stellar dynamical processes, and
the spin/orbit configuration is expected to be isotropically distributed. We
contrast this case with the 'aligned' case. The latter is the most realistic
situation for 'wet', gas-rich mergers, which are the expectation for
high-redshift galaxies. We find that if all halos at z>5-7 host a MBH, the
probability of the Milky Way (or similar size galaxy) to host a MBH today is
less than 50%, unless MBHs form continuously in galaxies. The 'occupation
fraction' of MBHs, intimately related to halo bias and MBH formation
efficiency, plays a crucial role in increasing the retention fraction. Small
halos, with shallow potential wells and low escape velocities, have a high
ejection probability, but the MBH merger rate is very low along their galaxy
formation merger hierarchy: MBH formation processes are likely inefficient in
such shallow potential wells. Recoils can decrease the overall frequency of
MBHs in small galaxies to ~60%, while they have little effect on the frequency
of MBHs in large galaxies (at most a 20% effect).Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Non-Gravitational Contributions to the Clustering of Ly-alpha Selected Galaxies: Implications for Cosmological Surveys
We show that the dependence of Ly-alpha absorption on environment leads to
significant non-gravitational features in the redshift space power-spectrum of
Ly-alpha selected galaxies. We derive a physically motivated fitting formula
that can be included in clustering analyses, and use this to discuss the
predicted features in the Ly-alpha galaxy power-spectrum based on detailed
models in which Ly-alpha absorption is influenced by gas infall and/or by
strong galactic outflows. We show that power-spectrum measurements could be
used to study the astrophysics of the galaxy-IGM connection, and to measure the
properties of outflows from star-forming galaxies. Applying the modified
redshift space power-spectrum to a Ly-alpha survey with parameters
corresponding to the planned Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment
(HETDEX), we find that the dependence of observed Ly-alpha flux on velocity
gradient and ionising background may compromise the ability of Ly-alpha
selected galaxy redshift surveys to constrain cosmology using information from
the full power-spectrum. This is because the effects of fluctuating ionizing
background and velocity gradients effect the shape of the observed
power-spectrum in ways that are similar to the shape of the primordial
power-spectrum and redshift space distortions respectively. We use the
Alcock-Paczynski test to show that without prior knowledge of the details of
Ly-alpha absorption in the IGM, the precision of line-of-sight and transverse
distance measurements for HETDEX will be ~1.3-1.7%, decreased by a factor of
~1.5-2 relative to the best case precision of ~0.8% available in a traditional
galaxy redshift survey. We specify the precision with which modelling of
Ly-alpha radiative transfer must be understood in order for HETDEX to achieve
distance measurements that are better than 1%.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to MNRA
Fisher Matrix Preloaded -- Fisher4Cast
The Fisher Matrix is the backbone of modern cosmological forecasting. We
describe the Fisher4Cast software: a general-purpose, easy-to-use, Fisher
Matrix framework. It is open source, rigorously designed and tested and
includes a Graphical User Interface (GUI) with automated LATEX file creation
capability and point-and-click Fisher ellipse generation. Fisher4Cast was
designed for ease of extension and, although written in Matlab, is easily
portable to open-source alternatives such as Octave and Scilab. Here we use
Fisher4Cast to present new 3-D and 4-D visualisations of the forecasting
landscape and to investigate the effects of growth and curvature on future
cosmological surveys. Early releases have been available at
http://www.cosmology.org.za since May 2008 with 750 downloads in the first
year. Version 2.2 is made public with this paper and includes a Quick Start
guide and the code used to produce the figures in this paper, in the hope that
it will be useful to the cosmology and wider scientific communities.Comment: 30 Pages, 15 figures. Minor revisions to match published version,
with some additional functionality described to match the current version
(2.2) of the code. Software available at http://www.cosmology.org.za. Usage,
structure and flow of the software, as well as tests performed are described
in the accompanying Users' Manua