Rapidly accreting supermassive stars: reliable determination of the final mass
Abstract
Supermassive black holes might form by direct collapse, with a supermassive star (SMS) as progenitor. In this scenario, the SMS accretes at > 0.1 Msun/yr until it collapses into a massive black hole seed due to the general-relativistic (GR) instability. However, the exact mass at which the collapse occurs is not known, as existing numerical simulations give divergent results. Here, this problem is addressed analytically, which allows for ab initio, reliable determination of the onset point of the GR instability, for given hydrostatic structures. We apply the relativistic equation of radial pulsations in its general form to the hydrostatic GENEC models already published. We show that the mass of spherical SMSs forming in atomically cooled haloes cannot exceed 500 000 Msun, in contrast to previous claims. On the other hand, masses in excess of this limit, up to 106 Msun, could be reached in alternative versions of direct collapse. Our method can be used to test the consistency of GR hydrodynamical stellar evolution codes.
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