High-redshift SMBHs can grow from stellar-mass seeds via chaotic accretion

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 03-2021
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume | Issue number 501 | 3
Pages (from-to) 4289-4297
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Extremely massive black holes, with masses MBH>109M⁠, have been observed at ever higher redshifts. These results create ever tighter constraints on the formation and growth mechanisms of early black holes. Here we show that even the most extreme black hole known, Pōniuā’ena, can grow from a 10M seed black hole via Eddington-limited luminous accretion, provided that accretion proceeds almost continuously, but is composed of a large number of episodes with individually uncorrelated initial directions. This chaotic accretion scenario ensures that the growing black hole spins slowly, with the dimensionless spin parameter a∼<0.2⁠, so its radiative efficiency is also low, ϵ ≃ 0.06. If accretion is even partially aligned, with 20−40 per cent of accretion events happening in the same direction, the black hole spin and radiative efficiency are much higher, leading to significantly slower growth. We suggest that the chaotic accretion scenario can be completely falsified only if a 109M black hole is discovered at z ≥ 9.1, approximately 150 Myr before Pōniuā’ena. The space density of extreme quasars suggests that only a very small fraction, roughly one in 4 × 107, of seed black holes need to encounter favourable growth conditions to produce the observed extreme quasars. Other seed black holes grow much less efficiently, mainly due to lower duty cycles, so are much more difficult to detect.
Document type Article
Note This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2021 The Author(s) published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab004
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2021MNRAS.501.4289Z/abstract
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