How realistic UV spectra and X-rays suppress the abundance of direct collapse black holes

Abstract

Observations of high redshift quasars at z>6 indicate that they harbor supermassive black holes (SMBHs) of a billion solar masses. The direct collapse scenario has emerged as the most plausible way to assemble SMBHs. The nurseries for the direct collapse black holes are massive primordial halos illuminated with an intense UV flux emitted by population II (Pop II) stars. In this study, we compute the critical value of such a flux (J21 crit) for realistic spectra of Pop II stars through three-dimensional cosmological simulations. We derive the dependence of J21 crit on the radiation spectra, on variations from halo to halo, and on the impact of X-ray ionization. Our findings show that the value of J21 crit is a few times 104 and only weakly depends on the adopted radiation spectra in the range between T rad=2 × 104-105 K. For three simulated halos of a few times 107~M, J21 crit varies from 2 × 104 - 5 × 104. The impact of X-ray ionization is almost negligible and within the expected scatter of J21 crit for background fluxes of J X,21 ≤ 0.1. The computed estimates of J21 crit have profound implications for the quasar abundance at z=10 as it lowers the number density of black holes forming through an isothermal direct collapse by a few orders of magnitude below the observed black holes density. However, the sites with moderate amounts of H2 cooling may still form massive objects sufficient to be compatible with observations.

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