Direct formation of massive black holes via dynamical collapse in metal-enriched merging galaxies at z 10: fully cosmological simulations

Abstract

We present the results of the first fully cosmological hydrodynamical simulations studying the merger-driven model for massive black hole (BH) seed formation via direct collapse. Using the zoom-in technique as well as particle splitting, we achieve a final spatial resolution of 2 pc. We show that the major merger of two massive galaxies at redshift z 8 results in the formation of a nuclear supermassive disk (SMD) of only 4 pc in radius, owing to a prodigious gas inflow sustained at 100-1000 M yr-1. The core of the merger remnant is metal-rich, well above solar abundance, and the SMD reaches a gaseous mass of 3 × 108 M in less than a million years after the merger, despite a concurrent prominent nuclear starburst. Dynamical heating as gas falls into the deepest part of the potential well, and heating and stirring by supernova blastwaves, generate a turbulent multi-phase interstellar medium, with a gas velocity dispersion exceeding 100 km s-1. As a result, only moderate fragmentation occurs in the inner 10-20 pc despite the temperature falls below 1000 K. The SMD is Jeans-unstable as well as bar-unstable and will collapse further adiabatically, becoming warm and ionized. We show that the SMD, following inevitable contraction, will become general relativistic unstable and directly form a supermassive BH of mass in the range 106-108 M, essentially skipping the stage of BH seed formation. These results confirm that mergers between the most massive galaxies at z 8-10 can naturally explain the rapid emergence of bright high-redshift quasars.

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