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arxiv: 2606.10036 · v2 · pith:K7ESE3TJnew · submitted 2026-06-08 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA

Learning the Universe at High Redshifts: Impact of Accretion Modeling on Early Black Hole Growth

Pith reviewed 2026-06-27 15:43 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA
keywords black hole accretioncosmological simulationshigh redshift galaxiesJWST observationssupermassive black holesseed black holesstellar feedbackearly universe
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The pith

Simulations assemble black holes of 10^6 to 10^7 solar masses at redshifts above 9 only when heavy seeds drive mergers or when Bondi accretion operates with weak feedback.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper tests how the choice of accretion rate scaling with black hole mass affects whether early black holes can grow large enough to match JWST detections at z greater than or equal to 9. It compares the standard Bondi-Hoyle prescription, where accretion scales with the square of black hole mass, against two free-fall prescriptions with shallower scalings. Bondi accretion grows heavy seeds rapidly in dense gas but stops easily when feedback heats the surroundings, while free-fall models help lighter seeds in calmer settings yet still fail to produce significant growth once standard stellar feedback is included. Only the combination of many heavy seeds plus mergers, or Bondi accretion under deliberately reduced feedback, reaches the observed masses. Readers care because these results map the specific conditions needed for any simulation to explain the sudden appearance of supermassive black holes shortly after the Big Bang.

Core claim

Our simulations can thus assemble BHs with masses of ∼10^6−10^7 M_⊙ at z≳9, as inferred by JWST, under two circumstances: 1) abundant heavy-seed formation that drives BH-BH mergers, or 2) Bondi accretion with weak feedback. Bondi accretion tends to produce stronger runaway growth than the free-fall models when using heavy (∼10^5 M_⊙) seeds in extreme environments owing to the steeper M_• scaling, but its sensitivity to the local gas sound speed makes it more susceptible to suppression from temperature increases due to AGN and stellar feedback. The free-fall models tend to produce stronger growth for lower-mass seeds (∼10^{3-4} M_⊙) in moderate environments as they are less dependent on the B

What carries the argument

Three accretion rate prescriptions that differ in how accretion rate scales with black hole mass: Bondi-Hoyle scaling as mass squared versus two free-fall models scaling as the square root of mass or linearly with mass.

If this is right

  • Heavy seeds plus mergers disproportionately boost later accretion-driven growth under the Bondi scaling because of its steeper mass dependence.
  • In moderate environments with fiducial stellar feedback, black hole growth stays negligible across all three accretion models for seeds below 10^4 solar masses.
  • Bondi accretion responds more strongly to AGN and stellar feedback than free-fall models because its rate depends on the square of black hole mass and on local sound speed.
  • Free-fall prescriptions allow relatively more growth for 10^3-10^4 solar mass seeds in quieter gas environments compared with Bondi.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The result implies that tightening constraints on early stellar feedback strength could decide whether Bondi or free-fall models are viable for high-redshift black hole populations.
  • Simulations that vary seed abundance and feedback simultaneously could map a broader range of pathways that still satisfy JWST mass limits.
  • Observations that separate black hole environments by gas density and temperature at z greater than 9 would directly test which accretion scaling operates.

Load-bearing premise

The fiducial stellar feedback implementation accurately represents the suppression of gas supply to low-mass seeds in moderate environments.

What would settle it

A survey finding 10^6 solar mass black holes at z greater than 9 in moderate-density regions with standard stellar feedback strength, or without any heavy seed candidates, would contradict the two-circumstance result.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.10036 by Aklant K. Bhowmick, Alejandro Saravia, Alex M. Garcia, Boon Kiat Oh, Greg L. Bryan, Jonathan Kho, Lars Hernquist, Laura Blecha, Niusha Ahvazi, Paul Torrey, Rainer Weinberger.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Distributions of DM surface densities in a cut through the most massive halo for the Large, Medium, and Small halo ICs each at z = 6. We overplot in a red circle the virial radius of each of these target halos using the same physical scale, highlighting the extreme differences in the halos and halo environments between ICs. seeding threshold (Mh ≥ 6.33 × 107M⊙ corresponding to the minimum of 32 DM particle… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Halo and stellar mass evolutions for the most massive halo in each of our three ICs. By z = 6, the most massive halo in the large, medium, and small halo ICs has reached a total mass of ∼ 3×1012 , 4×1011 , and 1.5×1010M⊙ respectively and a stellar masses of ∼ 2 × 1011 , 3 × 109 , and 2 × 107M⊙ respectively. Our Large Halo ICs are chosen to target the expected environments of the brightest z ∼ 6 quasars, bu… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: BH mass growth history for the most massive BH in each of the feedback and accretion model configurations for the large halo IC with the strict seed model. For each subgroup of panels (left and right), the left columns correspond to simulations run with the fiducial stellar feedback strength, whereas the right columns were run with 10% of the fiducial stellar feedback strength. Across both subgroups of pan… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: BH growth history for the most massive BH in our medium halo IC simulations with the strict seed model, formatted the same as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p010_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: BH growth histories for the most massive BH in our small halo IC simulations with the strict seed model, again formatted the same way as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p011_5.png] view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: BH growth histories for the most massive BH in our three different ICs with strict (solid lines) and lenient (dotted lines) seeding criteria. The fiducial AGN and stellar feedback was applied for all of the runs presented in this figure. More lenient seeding allows for enhanced BH growth from BH–BH mergers at early times, which preferentially enhances Bondi growth for 104 & 105 M⊙ seeds in Medium and Large… view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Redshift evolution of the average gas temperature and density in the most massive BH’s kernel, averaged over all three accretion models for each IC. For each line plotted, we also average over variations in the non-specified feedback channel, i.e. the ‘AGN’ line averages over both AGN and weak feedback runs as well as AGN and fiducial feedback runs. The large increase in temperature at late times for the l… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

JWST discoveries of the earliest ($z \gtrsim 9$) supermassive black holes (BHs, $M_\bullet \gtrsim 10^6\,\rm{M}_\odot$) challenge the BH seeding and accretion models of most cosmological simulations. In this work, we compare early BH growth arising from three different accretion prescriptions characterized by distinct scalings between the accretion rate ($\dot{M}_{\rm \bullet}$) and the BH mass ($M_{\rm \bullet}$): the commonly used Bondi-Hoyle model ($\dot{M}_{\rm \bullet}\propto M_{\rm \bullet}^2$), and two free-fall models with shallower scalings ($\dot{M}_{\rm \bullet}\propto M_{\rm \bullet}^{1/2}$ and $M_{\rm \bullet}$). Bondi accretion tends to produce stronger runaway growth than the free-fall models when using heavy ($\sim10^5\,\rm{M}_\odot$) seeds in extreme environments owing to the steeper $M_\bullet$ scaling, but its sensitivity to the local gas sound speed makes it more susceptible to suppression from temperature increases due to AGN and stellar feedback. The free-fall models tend to produce stronger growth for lower-mass seeds ($\sim10^{3-4}\,\rm{M}_\odot$) in moderate environments as they are less dependent on the BH's mass to accrete effectively, however in this regime BH growth remains negligible for all accretion models in the presence of fiducial stellar feedback. Enhancing early BH growth via many BH-BH mergers disproportionately enhances subsequent accretion-driven growth for Bondi due to the steeper $M_{\rm \bullet}$ dependence. Our simulations can thus assemble BHs with masses of $\sim10^6-10^7~M_{\odot}$ at $z\gtrsim9$, as inferred by JWST, under two circumstances: 1) abundant heavy-seed formation that drives BH-BH mergers, or 2) Bondi accretion with weak feedback.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 0 minor

Summary. The paper compares three sub-grid accretion prescriptions in cosmological simulations—Bondi-Hoyle (˙M_• ∝ M_•^{2}) and two free-fall models with shallower scalings (˙M_• ∝ M_•^{1/2} and M_•)—to assess their impact on early black hole growth at z ≳ 9. It reports that low-mass seeds (∼10^{3-4} M_⊙) experience negligible growth in moderate environments under fiducial stellar feedback for all models, while heavy seeds (∼10^5 M_⊙) enable growth via BH-BH mergers (enhanced for Bondi due to its steeper scaling) and Bondi accretion permits growth with weak feedback, allowing assembly of ∼10^6-10^7 M_⊙ BHs at z ≳ 9 under those two conditions.

Significance. If the results hold, the work isolates the effect of accretion-rate scaling on runaway growth versus feedback suppression and shows that mergers can bootstrap subsequent accretion, particularly for steeper scalings. This provides a concrete mapping between seeding assumptions, feedback strength, and the ability to match JWST-inferred high-z BH masses. The explicit multi-model comparison is a strength, as it avoids reducing outcomes to a single fitted parameter.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that BH growth remains negligible for all three accretion models for low-mass seeds in moderate environments rests on the fiducial stellar feedback implementation. No information is given on numerical resolution, convergence tests, or how the stellar feedback parameters (energy/momentum injection, coupling efficiency) were selected or validated, so the robustness of the 'negligible growth' baseline cannot be assessed from the provided text.
  2. [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph on free-fall models in the presence of fiducial stellar feedback): The distinction between accretion models only becomes relevant once the feedback-suppressed baseline for low-mass seeds is accepted. Without sensitivity tests varying stellar feedback strength or resolution, it is unclear whether the reported negligible growth is an artifact of the specific sub-grid implementation or a general result.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 1 unresolved

We thank the referee for their detailed and constructive report. We address each major comment below, focusing on the points raised about the abstract and the fiducial stellar feedback implementation.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that BH growth remains negligible for all three accretion models for low-mass seeds in moderate environments rests on the fiducial stellar feedback implementation. No information is given on numerical resolution, convergence tests, or how the stellar feedback parameters (energy/momentum injection, coupling efficiency) were selected or validated, so the robustness of the 'negligible growth' baseline cannot be assessed from the provided text.

    Authors: We agree that the manuscript would be strengthened by including more details on the simulation resolution and the basis for the fiducial stellar feedback parameters. The feedback implementation follows the standard sub-grid model used in our prior work on galaxy formation, where parameters were calibrated to match observed galaxy scaling relations at z~0-6. In the revised manuscript we will add a concise description of the adopted resolution (minimum cell size and particle mass) and cite the validation studies for the feedback coupling efficiency. We maintain that the negligible growth result is presented specifically under this fiducial setup rather than as a universal claim. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph on free-fall models in the presence of fiducial stellar feedback): The distinction between accretion models only becomes relevant once the feedback-suppressed baseline for low-mass seeds is accepted. Without sensitivity tests varying stellar feedback strength or resolution, it is unclear whether the reported negligible growth is an artifact of the specific sub-grid implementation or a general result.

    Authors: The central objective of the paper is to isolate the effect of the accretion-rate scaling (Bondi vs. free-fall) while holding the stellar feedback fixed at its fiducial value. We will revise the abstract and methods to explicitly state that the reported negligible growth for low-mass seeds applies under this standard feedback implementation and that different feedback strengths could modify the baseline. A full parameter study varying feedback efficiency and resolution lies outside the scope of the present comparison, which instead demonstrates how accretion model choice influences growth once that baseline is set. revision: partial

standing simulated objections not resolved
  • Conducting additional simulations with varied stellar feedback strength or resolution to test whether the negligible growth result is general rather than specific to the fiducial implementation.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: results are direct outputs of simulation runs with varied sub-grid prescriptions

full rationale

The paper reports numerical results from cosmological simulations comparing three accretion models (Bondi and two free-fall scalings) under a fixed fiducial stellar feedback implementation. The central claims—that JWST-mass BHs at z≳9 require either heavy seeds plus mergers or Bondi with weak feedback—follow directly from the simulation outcomes showing negligible low-mass seed growth in moderate environments with that feedback. No equations, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or self-citation chains are present in the derivation; the work consists of controlled numerical experiments whose outputs are independent of the inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The claim rests on the validity of the chosen sub-grid accretion and feedback prescriptions plus the assumption that the simulated environments are representative of the early universe; no new entities are postulated.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Standard Lambda-CDM cosmology and sub-grid models for star formation and stellar/AGN feedback are adequate for modeling high-redshift galaxy environments.
    Invoked throughout the simulation setup to evolve gas, stars, and black holes.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5946 in / 1268 out tokens · 22825 ms · 2026-06-27T15:43:48.160760+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Supermassive Black Hole Assembly from Heavy Seeds with Dynamical Friction in the BRAHMA Simulations: Implications for JWST, LISA, and the Local Universe

    astro-ph.GA 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Lenient heavy-seed models in BRAHMA simulations produce black hole merger rates above 100 per year and near-unity occupation fractions down to low-mass galaxies, while strict models yield only about 1 merger per year ...

Reference graph

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