Formation of massive black holes via collisions and accretion

Abstract

To explain the observed population of supermassive black holes at z~7, very massive seed black holes or, alternatively, super-Eddington scenarios are needed to reach final masses of the order of 109 solar masses. A popular explanation for massive seeds has been the direct collapse model, which predicts the formation of a single massive object due to the direct collapse of a massive gas cloud. Simulations over the last years have however shown that such a scenario is very difficult to achieve. A realistic model of black hole formation should therefore take fragmentation into account, and consider the interaction between stellar-dynamical and gas-dynamical processes. We present here numerical simulations pursued with the AMUSE code, employing an approximate treatment of the gas. Based on these simulations, we show that very massive black holes of 104-105 solar masses may form depending on the gas supply and the accretion onto the protostars.

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