Quasars observed at redshifts $z7.5$ are powered by supermassive black
holes which are too large to have grown from early stellar remnants. A proposal
for alleviating this tension is for dust and metal-free gas clouds to have
undergone a process of direct collapse, producing black hole seeds of mass
$M_seed\sim10^5 M_ødot$ around redshift $z 17$. For direct
collapse to occur, a large flux of UV photons must exist to photodissociate
molecular hydrogen, allowing the gas to cool slowly and avoid fragmentation. We
investigate the possibility of sub-keV mass dark matter decaying or
annihilating to produce the UV flux needed to cause direct collapse. We find
that annihilating dark matter with a mass in the range of $13.6 eV
m_dm 20 eV$ can produce the required flux while avoiding
existing constraints. A non-thermally produced dark matter particle which
comprises the entire dark matter abundance requires a thermally averaged cross
section of $łanglev 10^-35$ cm$^3/$s. Alternatively, the
flux could originate from a thermal relic which comprises only a fraction
$\sim10^-9$ of the total dark matter density. Decaying dark matter models
which are unconstrained by independent astrophysical observations are unable to
sufficiently suppress molecular hydrogen, except in gas clouds embedded in dark
matter halos which are larger, cuspier, or more concentrated than current
simulations predict. Lastly, we explore how our results could change with the
inclusion of full three-dimensional effects. Notably, we demonstrate that if
the $H_2$ self-shielding is less than the conservative estimate used
in this work, the range of both annihilating and decaying dark matter models
which can cause direct collapse is significantly increased.
Description
Supermassive black hole seeds from sub-keV dark matter
%0 Generic
%1 friedlander2022supermassive
%A Friedlander, Avi
%A Schon, Sarah
%A Vincent, Aaron C.
%D 2022
%K library
%T Supermassive black hole seeds from sub-keV dark matter
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.11100
%X Quasars observed at redshifts $z7.5$ are powered by supermassive black
holes which are too large to have grown from early stellar remnants. A proposal
for alleviating this tension is for dust and metal-free gas clouds to have
undergone a process of direct collapse, producing black hole seeds of mass
$M_seed\sim10^5 M_ødot$ around redshift $z 17$. For direct
collapse to occur, a large flux of UV photons must exist to photodissociate
molecular hydrogen, allowing the gas to cool slowly and avoid fragmentation. We
investigate the possibility of sub-keV mass dark matter decaying or
annihilating to produce the UV flux needed to cause direct collapse. We find
that annihilating dark matter with a mass in the range of $13.6 eV
m_dm 20 eV$ can produce the required flux while avoiding
existing constraints. A non-thermally produced dark matter particle which
comprises the entire dark matter abundance requires a thermally averaged cross
section of $łanglev 10^-35$ cm$^3/$s. Alternatively, the
flux could originate from a thermal relic which comprises only a fraction
$\sim10^-9$ of the total dark matter density. Decaying dark matter models
which are unconstrained by independent astrophysical observations are unable to
sufficiently suppress molecular hydrogen, except in gas clouds embedded in dark
matter halos which are larger, cuspier, or more concentrated than current
simulations predict. Lastly, we explore how our results could change with the
inclusion of full three-dimensional effects. Notably, we demonstrate that if
the $H_2$ self-shielding is less than the conservative estimate used
in this work, the range of both annihilating and decaying dark matter models
which can cause direct collapse is significantly increased.
@misc{friedlander2022supermassive,
abstract = {Quasars observed at redshifts $z\sim 7.5$ are powered by supermassive black
holes which are too large to have grown from early stellar remnants. A proposal
for alleviating this tension is for dust and metal-free gas clouds to have
undergone a process of direct collapse, producing black hole seeds of mass
$M_\textrm{seed}\sim10^5 M_\odot$ around redshift $z \sim 17$. For direct
collapse to occur, a large flux of UV photons must exist to photodissociate
molecular hydrogen, allowing the gas to cool slowly and avoid fragmentation. We
investigate the possibility of sub-keV mass dark matter decaying or
annihilating to produce the UV flux needed to cause direct collapse. We find
that annihilating dark matter with a mass in the range of $13.6 \textrm{ eV}
\le m_{dm} \le 20 \textrm{ eV}$ can produce the required flux while avoiding
existing constraints. A non-thermally produced dark matter particle which
comprises the entire dark matter abundance requires a thermally averaged cross
section of $\langle\sigma v \rangle \sim 10^{-35}$ cm$^3/$s. Alternatively, the
flux could originate from a thermal relic which comprises only a fraction
$\sim10^{-9}$ of the total dark matter density. Decaying dark matter models
which are unconstrained by independent astrophysical observations are unable to
sufficiently suppress molecular hydrogen, except in gas clouds embedded in dark
matter halos which are larger, cuspier, or more concentrated than current
simulations predict. Lastly, we explore how our results could change with the
inclusion of full three-dimensional effects. Notably, we demonstrate that if
the $\mathrm{H}_2$ self-shielding is less than the conservative estimate used
in this work, the range of both annihilating and decaying dark matter models
which can cause direct collapse is significantly increased.},
added-at = {2022-12-22T06:58:35.000+0100},
author = {Friedlander, Avi and Schon, Sarah and Vincent, Aaron C.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c45bc2f5505fdb255d8c3fd0c378afb8/gpkulkarni},
description = {Supermassive black hole seeds from sub-keV dark matter},
interhash = {3e56165860046b8064431692434133ad},
intrahash = {c45bc2f5505fdb255d8c3fd0c378afb8},
keywords = {library},
note = {cite arxiv:2212.11100Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures},
timestamp = {2022-12-22T06:58:35.000+0100},
title = {Supermassive black hole seeds from sub-keV dark matter},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.11100},
year = 2022
}