Feedback Limits Rapid Growth of Seed Black Holes at High Redshift

Abstract

Seed black holes formed in the collapse of population III stars have been invoked to explain the presence of supermassive black holes at high redshift. It has been suggested that a seed black hole can grow up to 105 6 through highly super-Eddington accretion for a period of 106 7 yr between redshift z=20 24. We studied the feedback of radiation pressure, Compton heating and outflow during the seed black hole growth. It is found that its surrounding medium fueled to the seed hole is greatly heated by Compton heating. For a super-critical accretion onto a 103 seed hole, a Compton sphere (with a temperature 106K) forms in a timescale of 1.6× 103yr so that the hole is only supplied by a rate of 10-3 Eddington limit from the Compton sphere. Beyond the Compton sphere, the kinetic feedback of the strong outflow heats the medium at large distance, this leads to a dramatical decrease of the outer Bondi accretion onto the black hole and avoid the accumulation of the matter. The highly super-critical accretion will be rapidly halted by the strong feedback. The seed black holes hardly grow up at the very early universe unless the strong feedback can be avoided.

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