4.7 Article

THE BIGGEST EXPLOSIONS IN THE UNIVERSE. II.

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 777, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/777/2/99

Keywords

black hole physics; early universe; galaxies: high-redshift; quasars: general; hydrodynamics; radiative transfer; stars: early-type; supernovae: general

Funding

  1. LANL LDRD Director's Fellowships
  2. Baden-Wurttemberg-Stiftung [P-LS-SPII/18]
  3. US DOE Program for Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) [DE-FC02-09ER41618]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-87ER40328]
  5. Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA
  6. NSF) [PHY08-22648, PHY110-2511]
  7. ARC Future Fellowship [FT120100363]
  8. Monash University Larkins Fellowship
  9. National Nuclear Security Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy at Los Alamos National Laboratory [DE-AC52-06NA25396]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

One of the leading contenders for the origin of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at z greater than or similar to 7 is catastrophic baryon collapse in atomically cooled halos at z similar to 15. In this scenario, a few protogalaxies form in the presence of strong Lyman-Werner UV backgrounds that quench H-2 formation in their constituent halos, preventing them from forming stars or blowing heavy elements into the intergalactic medium prior to formation. At masses of 10(8) M-circle dot and virial temperatures of 10(4) K, gas in these halos rapidly cools by H lines, in some cases forming 10(4)-10(6) M-circle dot Population III stars and, a short time later, the seeds of SMBHs. Instead of collapsing directly to black holes (BHs), some of these stars died in the most energetic thermonuclear explosions in the universe. We have modeled the explosions of such stars in the dense cores of line-cooled protogalaxies in the presence of cosmological flows. In stark contrast to the explosions in diffuse regions in previous simulations, these supernovae briefly engulf the protogalaxy, but then collapse back into its dark matter potential. Fallback drives turbulence that efficiently distributes metals throughout the interior of the halo and fuels the rapid growth of nascent BHs at its center. The accompanying starburst and X-ray emission from these line-cooled galaxies easily distinguish them from more slowly evolving neighbors and might reveal the birthplaces of SMBHs on the sky.

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