Litcius/Paper detail

Seeds don’t sink: even massive black hole ‘seeds’ cannot migrate to galaxy centres efficiently

Linhao Ma, Philip F. Hopkins, Xiangcheng Ma, Daniel Anglés‐Alcázar, Claude‐André Faucher‐Giguère, Luke Zoltan Kelley

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Possible formation scenarios of supermassive black holes (BHs) in the early universe include rapid growth from less massive seed BHs via super-Eddington accretion or runaway mergers, yet both of these scenarios would require seed BHs to efficiently sink to and be trapped in the Galactic Centre via dynamical friction. This may not be true for their complicated dynamics in clumpy high-z galaxies. In this work, we study this ‘sinking problem’ with state-of-the-art high-resolution cosmological simulations, combined with both direct N-body integration of seed BH trajectories and post-processing of randomly generated test particles with a newly developed dynamical friction estimator. We find that seed BHs less massive than $10^8\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$ (i.e. all but the already-supermassive seeds) cannot efficiently sink in typical high-z galaxies. We also discuss two possible solutions: dramatically increasing the number of seeds such that one seed can end up trapped in the Galactic Centre by chance, or seed BHs being embedded in dense structures (e.g. star clusters) with effective masses above the mass threshold. We discuss the limitations of both solutions.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsGalaxyAstrophysicsBlack hole (networking)AstronomyComputer scienceLink-state routing protocolRouting protocolRouting (electronic design automation)Computer networkGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
Seeds don’t sink: even massive black hole ‘seeds’ cannot migrate to galaxy centres efficiently | Litcius