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THE FIRST SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES?

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Presentation on theme: "THE FIRST SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES?"— Presentation transcript:

1 THE FIRST SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES?
Mitch Begelman JILA, University of Colorado

2 COLLABORATORS Marta Volonteri (Cambridge/Michigan)
Martin Rees (Cambridge)

3 COLLABORATORS Marta Volonteri (Cambridge/Michigan)
Martin Rees (Cambridge) Elena Rossi (JILA) Phil Armitage (JILA)

4  NEED TO EXPLAIN: Ubiquity of BHs in present-day galaxies
QSOs with M>109M at z>6 Age of Universe < 20 tSalpeter Eddington-limited accretion would have to: Start early Be nearly continuous Start with MBH >10 – 100 M

5 The Rees Flow Chart Begelman & Rees, MNRAS 1978

6 One more time, with calligraphy… Rees, Physica Scripta, 1978

7 18 years later… with 4-color printing!
Begelman & Rees, “Gravity’s Fatal Attraction” 1996

8 ORIGIN OF SEEDS: 2 APPROACHES
Pop III remnants ~100 (?) M BHs form at z~20 Sink to center of merged haloes Accrete gas/merge with other seeds Direct collapse Initial BH mass = ? How is fragmentation avoided? Growth mainly by accretion of gas Problems faced by both: angular momentum transport Can be exceeded?

9 WHAT ANGULAR MOMENTUM PROBLEM?
WHOSE LIMIT? EDDINGTON SEEDS FROM DIRECT COLLAPSE? OBSERVING SEED BH FORMATION

10 Halo with slight rotation Gas collapses if
DM gas DM gas Dynamical loss of angular momentum through nested global gravitational instabilities “BARS WITHIN BARS” (Shlosman, Frank & Begelman 89)

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12 WHEN IS GAS UNSTABLE? Init. collapse with conserved ang. mom.
Mestel, rigid, exponential disk Include NFW halo potential Vary fraction of gas collapsing, fd Choose halo ang. mom. parameter λspin from lognormal distribution Stability threshold: f T/W > 0.25 Christodoulou et al. 1995, f = form factor

13 STABLE UNSTABLE Probability of instability, lognormal distibution
Max. halo spin parameter for instability, as function of gas infall fraction STABLE Mestel exponential rigid UNSTABLE

14 Global ang. mom. transport (“Bars within Bars”) :
M yr-1 Mass distribution isothermal, Accumulated mass dominates for BWB fails at ?

15 Local ang. mom. transport ( ) :
M yr-1 viscosity parameter (~1: Gammie 2001) If T const. or incr. inwards, likely to reach center FRAGMENTATION UNLIKELY TO STOP INFALL

16 TEMP./METALLICITY DEPENDENCE
Metal-free, H2-dissociated gas falls in (Metal rich and/or H2 fragments?) Inflow rate, mass accumulation HIGH Infall requires H2 or pollution by Pop III Inflow rate, mass accumulation LOW FAVORS DIRECT BH FORMATION FAVORS POP III STAR FORMATION

17 WHOSE LIMIT? SUPPOSE A SEED BH SETTLES IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ACCUMULATED GAS ACCUMULATED GAS Max. BH accretion rate is for the mass of the ENVELOPE BH

18 RAPID GROWTH OF A PREGALACTIC BH
+ FORMATION OF THE SEED? “QUASISTAR” ACCUMULATED GAS Pregalactic halo Could seed BH grow from ~10 to >105 MSol at ? (Begelman, Volonteri & Rees 06)

19 YOU’VE GOT TO BE KIDDING
WHAT IS A “QUASISTAR”? Self-gravitating structure laid down by infall Radiation-dominated, rotation crucial Pre-BH: Entropy small near center, increases with r Very different from the supermassive stars postulated by Hoyle and Fowler YOU’VE GOT TO BE KIDDING

20 WHAT IS A “QUASISTAR”? Self-gravitating structure laid down by infall
THAT’S BETTER Self-gravitating structure laid down by infall Radiation-dominated, rotation crucial Pre-BH: Entropy small near center, increases with r Very different from the supermassive stars postulated by Hoyle and Fowler Post-BH: “Nuclear” energy source is BH accretion Expands and becomes fully convective Like radiation-dominated, metal-free red giant

21 QUASISTAR STRUCTURE : PRE-BH
Mass m* (M) increases with time M yr-1 Core with Envelope Entropy increases outward – convectively stable Rotation increases binding energy Outer radius constant Core radius shrinks Nuclear burning inadequate to unbind star Core mass ~ 10 M constant When core temp. rapid cooling by thermal neutrinos

22 + CORE COLLAPSE AND FORMATION OF ~10-20 M SEED BH
SUBSEQUENT ACCRETION AT EDDINGTON LIMIT FOR QUASISTAR MASS

23 QUASISTAR STRUCTURE : POST-BH
BH accretes adiabatically from quasistar interior Adjusts so energy liberated Radiation-supported convective envelope (w/rotation) Central temp drops to ~ 106 K Radius expands to ~ 100 AU Convection becomes inefficient well inside photosphere, where , but photosphere temp. drops as BH grows Teff < 5000 K opacity crisis

24 OPACITY CRISIS Pop III opacity plummets below T~5000 K
Higher temp than for solar abundances

25 Mayer & Duschl 2005 Metal-free opacities

26 Metal-free opacities Mayer & Duschl 2005
Plausible range of photosphere densities Analogous to Hayashi track, but match to radiation- dominated convective envelope

27 Mayer & Duschl 2005 Est. min. temp. If Tphot drops below minimum (~5000 K), flux inside quasistar exceeds Eddington limit, dispersing it.

28 OPACITY CRISIS Pop III opacity plummets below T~5000 K
Higher temp than for solar abundances If Tphot < 5000 K: Photosphere migrates inward Outer layers collapse (κ lower so flux sub-Eddington) Core density increases higher Super-Eddington flux in quasistar mass loss Self-grav., so rotation can’t take up slack (unstable) Unlike red giant, radn. pressure dominance + BH accretion physics may not permit static solution Outcome unclear: Likely mass loss exceeds infall, quasistar eventually disperses

29 OPACITY CRISIS Pop III opacity plummets below T~5000 K
Higher temp than for solar abundances Convection is relatively inefficient Transition to radiative envelope at T~55,000 K ~ 10 Tphot κ ~ κes at transition, but much lower at photosphere If Tphot < Tmin , flux exceeds Eddington limit at transition quasistar disperses Connect BH accretion physics to quasistar structure, predict Tphot(mBH, m*)

30 CONNECTION TO BH ACCRETION
Once limiting temperature is reached, … dispersal is inevitable (and accelerates)

31 QUASISTAR MODELS WITH “TOY” OPACITY
Begelman, Rossi & Armitage 2007

32 QUASISTAR MODELS WITH “TOY” OPACITY
Begelman, Rossi & Armitage 2007

33 GROWING THE BLACK HOLE Eddington-limited growth:
Ignoring opacity crisis: M yr-1 Super-Eddington growth to ~107 M in yr Onset of opacity crisis: Teff ~ 5000 K when Estimates sensitive to: Value of Tmin Details of BH accretion Energy loss details: rotational funnel, photon bubbles….

34 CAN QUASISTARS BE DETECTED?

35 DETECTING A QUASISTAR Most time spent as ~5000 K blackbody
Radiates at Eddington limit for 105m5 M Max flux ~

36 JWST z=6

37 JWST z=6 z=20 z=10 PEAK OF BLACKBODY

38 DETECTING A QUASISTAR Most time spent as ~5000 K blackbody
Radiates at Eddington limit for 105m5 M Max flux ~ Better to 3.5µm, on Wien tail Corona/mass loss hard tail, easier detection

39 JWST z=6 z=20 z=10 WIEN TAIL – MASS LOSS MAY IMPROVE FURTHER

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41 HOW COMMON ARE QUASISTARS?
1 Nseeds (Mpc-3) 100 per L* galaxy 1 per L* galaxy Cumulative comoving no. density of seeds …but their lifetimes are short

42 COMOVING DENSITY OF QUASISTARS
No enrichment L* galaxies Lifetime = 106 yr Some enrichment Metal enrichment model from Scannapieco et al. 2003 Heavy enrichment

43 COMOVING DENSITY OF QUASISTARS
All 104 K haloes 100 per L* galaxy Lifetime = 106 yr 104 K haloes with λ<0.02 1 per L* galaxy Metal enrichment model from Scannapieco et al. 2003

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45 DENSITY ON SKY 10-3 seeds Mpc-3 (1/L* gal.) 103.5 QS deg.-2
JWST FOV ~ 4.8 arcmin2 ~ 1 per random field Could be ~10-100x more common How to distinguish from other objects? Colors: ~pure blackbody (not dust reddened) Observe on Wien tail No lines (distinguish from T dwarfs) Unresolved (distinguish from nearby starbursts) Clustering (like 104 K haloes)

46 QUASISTAR DENSITY ON SKY
10/JWST field 1/JWST field Lifetime = 106 yr

47 100 per JWST field 10 per JWST field

48 WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? If super-Edd. phase extends beyond opacity crisis, BH seeds could be as massive as 106 M Worst case: super-Edd. phase ends at ~103 M 10 tSalpeter between z=10 and z= growth by (only) 20,000 BUT Exceeding LEdd by factor squares growth factor! Mergers can account for factor of growth

49 CONCLUSIONS I Angular momentum transport is fast if global gravitational instabilities set in (“Bars within Bars”) BH can grow at Eddington limit for the surrounding envelope, which can be cvcvcvcfor the BH BH seed can form in situ from the infalling envelope itself (aided by ν cooling) or can be captured Pop III remnant

50 CONCLUSIONS II BH seeds grow inside a “quasistar” powered by BH accretion, with a radiation pressure-supported convective envelope Min. Teff of quasistar is ~5000 K, lifetime is > 106 yr Quasistars could be common and may be detectable by JWST

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