4.7 Article

CAN SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES FORM IN METAL-ENRICHED HIGH-REDSHIFT PROTOGALAXIES?

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 686, Issue 2, Pages 801-814

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/591636

Keywords

cosmology: theory; galaxies: formation; stars: formation

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan [16204012, 18740117, 18026008, 19047004]
  2. NASA [NNG04GI88G]
  3. Hungarian National Office forResearch and Technology (NKTH)
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18026008, 18740117, 16204012] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Primordial gas in protogalactic DM halos with virial temperatures T-vir greater than or similar to 10(4) K begins to cool and condense via atomic hydrogen. Provided that this gas is irradiated by a strong UV flux and remains free of H-2 and other molecules, it has been proposed that the halo with T-vir similar to 10(4) K may avoid fragmentation and lead to the rapid formation of an SMBH as massive as M approximate to 10(5)-10(6) M-circle dot. This head start'' would help explain the presence of SMBHs with inferred masses of several times 10(9) M-circle dot, powering the bright quasars discovered in the SDSS at redshift z greater than or similar to 6. However, high-redshift DM halos with T-vir similar to 10(4) K are likely already enriched with at least trace amounts of metals and dust produced by prior star formation in their progenitors. Here we study the thermal and chemical evolution of low-metallicity gas exposed to extremely strong UV radiation fields. Our results, obtained in one-zone models, suggest that gas fragmentation is inevitable above a critical metallicity, whose value is between Z(cr) approximate to 3 x 10(-4) Z(circle dot) ( in the absence of dust) and as low as Z(cr) approximate to 5 x 10(-6) Z(circle dot) (with a dust-to-gas mass ratio of about 0.01Z/Z(circle dot)). We propose that when the metallicity exceeds these critical values, dense clusters of low-mass stars may form at the halo nucleus. Relatively massive stars in such a cluster can then rapidly coalesce into a single more massive object, which may produce an intermediate-mass BH remnant with a mass up to M less than or similar to 10(2)-10(3) M-circle dot.

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