SIMBAD references

2014MNRAS.437.1576B - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 437, 1576-1592 (2014/January-2)

Massive black hole seeds born via direct gas collapse in galaxy mergers: their properties, statistics and environment.

BONOLI S., MAYER L. and CALLEGARI S.

Abstract (from CDS):

We study the statistics and cosmic evolution of massive black hole seeds formed during major mergers of gas-rich late-type galaxies. Generalizing the results of the hydrosimulations from Mayer et al., we envision a scenario in which a supermassive star can form at the centre of galaxies that just experienced a major merger owing to a multiscale powerful gas inflow, provided that such galaxies live in haloes with masses above 1011M, are gas rich and disc dominated, and do not already host a massive black hole. We assume that the ultimate collapse of the supermassive star leads to the rapid formation of a black hole of 105M following a quasi-star stage. Using a model for galaxy formation applied to the outputs of the Millennium Simulation, we show that the conditions required for this massive black hole formation route to take place in the concordance Λ cold dark matter model are actually common at high redshift and can be realized even at low redshift. Most major mergers above z ∼ 4 in haloes with mass >1011M can lead to the formation of a massive seed and, at z ∼ 2, the fraction of favourable mergers decreases to about half. Interestingly, we find that even in the local universe a fraction ( ∼ 20 per cent) of major mergers in massive haloes still satisfies the conditions for our massive black hole formation route. Those late events take place in galaxies with a markedly low clustering amplitude, that have lived in isolation for most of their life and that are experiencing a major merger for the first time. We predict that massive black hole seeds from galaxy mergers can dominate the massive end of the mass function at high (z > 4) and intermediate (z ∼ 2) redshifts relative to lighter seeds formed at higher redshift, for example, by the collapse of Pop III stars. Finally, a fraction of these massive seeds could lie, soon after formation, above the MBH-MBulge relation.

Abstract Copyright: © 2013 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2013)

Journal keyword(s): black hole physics - galaxies: active - galaxies: formation - quasars: supermassive black holes - cosmology: theory

Simbad objects: 1

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