Supermassive Primordial Black Holes from a Catalyzed Dark Phase Transition for Little Red Dots
Abstract
JWST has revealed an abundant population of compact, low-metallicity "Little Red Dots" (LRDs) at high redshift, challenging conventional scenarios in which supermassive black holes (SMBHs) grow from stellar-mass seeds. We consider a scenario in which the SMBHs are instead supermassive primordial black holes (SMPBHs), formed directly in a decoupled, subdominant dark sector undergoing a first-order phase transition. Unlike conventional stochastic phase transitions, our mechanism is based on the catalysis by domain walls (DWs): most of the Universe completes the transition rapidly, while rare long-lived false-vacuum domains survive because of DW statistics and collapse into PBHs. This mechanism naturally yields SMPBH seeds with masses up to M PBH O(1010) M, whose abundance can account for the observed LRD population. It also avoids the usual tensions with phase transition completion, N eff, and large curvature perturbations. The dark phase transition simultaneously generates an ultra-low-frequency stochastic gravitational-wave background peaking near the pulsar-timing-array range, providing a test of this dark-sector origin of LRDs.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.