4.7 Article

H2 suppression with shocking inflows: testing a pathway for supermassive black hole formation

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 439, Issue 4, Pages 3798-3807

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu230

Keywords

black hole physics; methods: numerical; cosmology: theory

Funding

  1. NASA [NNX11AE05G, NNX12AH41G]
  2. NSF [AST-0908390, AST-1008134]
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [1008134] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The presence of quasars at redshifts z > 6 indicates the existence of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) as massive as a few times 10(9) M-circle dot, challenging models for SMBH formation. One pathway is through the direct collapse of gas in T-vir greater than or similar to 10(4) K haloes; however, this requires the suppression of H-2 cooling to prevent fragmentation. In this paper, we examine a proposed new mechanism for this suppression which relies on cold-mode accretion flows leading to shocks at high densities (n > 10(4) cm(-3)) and temperatures (T > 10(4) K). In such gas, H-2 is efficiently collisionally dissociated. We use high-resolution numerical simulations to test this idea, demonstrating that such haloes typically have lower temperature progenitors, in which cooling is efficient. Those haloes do show filamentary flows; however, the gas shocks at or near the virial radius (at low densities), thus preventing the proposed collisional mechanism from operating. We do find that if we artificially suppress H-2 formation with a high-UV background, so as to allow gas in the halo centre to enter the high-temperature, high-density 'zone of no return', it will remain there even if the UV flux is turned off, collapsing to high density at high temperature. Due to computational limitations, we simulated only three haloes. However, we demonstrate, using Monte Carlo calculations of 10(6) halo merger histories, that a few rare haloes could assemble rapidly enough to avoid efficient H-2 cooling in all of their progenitor haloes, provided that the UV background exceeds J(21) similar to few at redshifts as high as z similar to 20.

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