The Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH) scenario provides a solution for
forming the massive black holes powering bright quasars observed in the early
Universe. A prerequisite for forming a DCBH is that the formation of (much less
massive) Population III stars be avoided - this can be achieved by destroying
H$_2$ via Lyman-Werner (LW) radiation (E$_LW$ = 12.6 eV). We find that
two conditions must be met in the proto-galaxy that will host the DCBH. First,
prior star formation must be delayed; this can be achieved with a background LW
flux of J$_BG 100\ J_21$. Second, an intense burst of LW
radiation from a neighbouring star-bursting proto-galaxy is required, just
before the gas cloud undergoes gravitational collapse, to finally suppress star
formation completely. We show here for the first time using high-resolution
hydrodynamical simulations, including full radiative transfer, that this
low-level background, combined with tight synchronisation and irradiation of a
secondary proto-galaxy by a primary proto-galaxy, inevitably moves the
secondary proto-galaxy onto the isothermal atomic cooling track, without the
deleterious effects of either photo-evaporating the gas or polluting it by
heavy elements. These, atomically cooled, massive proto-galaxies are expected
to ultimately form a DCBH of mass $10^4 - 10^5 M_ødot$.
Beschreibung
[1703.03805] Rapid Formation of Massive Black Holes in close proximity to Embryonic Proto-Galaxies
%0 Generic
%1 regan2017rapid
%A Regan, John
%A Visbal, Eli
%A Wise, John H.
%A Haiman, Zoltan
%A Johansson, Peter H.
%A Bryan, Greg L.
%D 2017
%K black collapse direct hole simulation
%T Rapid Formation of Massive Black Holes in close proximity to Embryonic
Proto-Galaxies
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/1703.03805
%X The Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH) scenario provides a solution for
forming the massive black holes powering bright quasars observed in the early
Universe. A prerequisite for forming a DCBH is that the formation of (much less
massive) Population III stars be avoided - this can be achieved by destroying
H$_2$ via Lyman-Werner (LW) radiation (E$_LW$ = 12.6 eV). We find that
two conditions must be met in the proto-galaxy that will host the DCBH. First,
prior star formation must be delayed; this can be achieved with a background LW
flux of J$_BG 100\ J_21$. Second, an intense burst of LW
radiation from a neighbouring star-bursting proto-galaxy is required, just
before the gas cloud undergoes gravitational collapse, to finally suppress star
formation completely. We show here for the first time using high-resolution
hydrodynamical simulations, including full radiative transfer, that this
low-level background, combined with tight synchronisation and irradiation of a
secondary proto-galaxy by a primary proto-galaxy, inevitably moves the
secondary proto-galaxy onto the isothermal atomic cooling track, without the
deleterious effects of either photo-evaporating the gas or polluting it by
heavy elements. These, atomically cooled, massive proto-galaxies are expected
to ultimately form a DCBH of mass $10^4 - 10^5 M_ødot$.
@misc{regan2017rapid,
abstract = {The Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH) scenario provides a solution for
forming the massive black holes powering bright quasars observed in the early
Universe. A prerequisite for forming a DCBH is that the formation of (much less
massive) Population III stars be avoided - this can be achieved by destroying
H$_2$ via Lyman-Werner (LW) radiation (E$_{\rm{LW}}$ = 12.6 eV). We find that
two conditions must be met in the proto-galaxy that will host the DCBH. First,
prior star formation must be delayed; this can be achieved with a background LW
flux of J$_{\rm BG} \gtrsim 100\ J_{21}$. Second, an intense burst of LW
radiation from a neighbouring star-bursting proto-galaxy is required, just
before the gas cloud undergoes gravitational collapse, to finally suppress star
formation completely. We show here for the first time using high-resolution
hydrodynamical simulations, including full radiative transfer, that this
low-level background, combined with tight synchronisation and irradiation of a
secondary proto-galaxy by a primary proto-galaxy, inevitably moves the
secondary proto-galaxy onto the isothermal atomic cooling track, without the
deleterious effects of either photo-evaporating the gas or polluting it by
heavy elements. These, atomically cooled, massive proto-galaxies are expected
to ultimately form a DCBH of mass $10^4 - 10^5 M_{\odot}$.},
added-at = {2017-03-14T09:54:35.000+0100},
author = {Regan, John and Visbal, Eli and Wise, John H. and Haiman, Zoltan and Johansson, Peter H. and Bryan, Greg L.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2faa7877c38b963f217c3a16b5a67bad2/miki},
description = {[1703.03805] Rapid Formation of Massive Black Holes in close proximity to Embryonic Proto-Galaxies},
interhash = {717bf5be1b523600f4852b7686c6d83e},
intrahash = {faa7877c38b963f217c3a16b5a67bad2},
keywords = {black collapse direct hole simulation},
note = {cite arxiv:1703.03805Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy, March 13th 2017},
timestamp = {2017-03-14T09:54:35.000+0100},
title = {Rapid Formation of Massive Black Holes in close proximity to Embryonic
Proto-Galaxies},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1703.03805},
year = 2017
}