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arxiv: 1504.00676 · v2 · pith:MH2R5MZJnew · submitted 2015-04-02 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · astro-ph.CO

Direct collapse black hole formation via high-velocity collisions of protogalaxies

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.CO
keywords blackprotogalaxiescollapsecollisionscoolsdensityemissionhigh
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We propose high-velocity collisions of protogalaxies as a new pathway to form supermassive stars (SMSs) with masses of ~ 10^5 Msun at high redshift (z > 10). When protogalaxies hosted by dark matter halos with a virial temperature of ~ 10^4 K collide with a relative velocity > 200 km/s, the gas is shock-heated to ~ 10^6 K and subsequently cools isobarically via free-free emission and He^+, He, and H line emission. Since the gas density (> 10^4 cm^{-3}) is high enough to destroy H_2 molecules by collisional dissociation, the shocked gas never cools below ~ 10^4 K. Once a gas cloud of ~ 10^5 Msun reaches this temperature, it becomes gravitationally unstable and forms a SMS which will rapidly collapse into a super massive black hole (SMBH) via general relativistic instability. We perform a simple analytic estimate of the number density of direct-collapse black holes (DCBHs) formed through this scenario (calibrated with cosmological N-body simulations) and find n_{DCBH} ~ 10^{-9} Mpc^{-3} (comoving) by z = 10. This could potentially explain the abundance of bright high-z quasars.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

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  1. Direct Collapse Black Hole Candidates from Decaying Dark Matter

    hep-ph 2025-09 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Axion dark matter decay injects 1-13.6 eV photons that suppress H2, enabling atomic cooling halos and direct collapse black hole seeds for axion masses 24.5-26.5 eV and couplings down to 4e-12/GeV.