Direct collapse black hole
Direct collapse black holes are high-mass black hole seeds that form from the direct collapse of a large amount of material. They putatively formed within the redshift range z=15–30, when the Universe was about 100–250 million years old. Unlike seeds formed from the first population of stars, direct collapse black hole seeds are formed by a direct, general relativistic instability. They are very massive, with a typical mass at formation of ~. This category of black hole seeds was originally proposed theoretically to alleviate the challenge in building supermassive black holes already at redshift z~7, as numerous observations to date have confirmed.
Formation
Direct collapse black holes are massive black hole seeds theorized to have formed in the high-redshift Universe and with typical masses at formation of ~, but spanning between and. The environmental physical conditions to form a DCBH are the following:- Metal-free gas.
- Atomic-cooling gas.
- Sufficiently large flux of Lyman–Werner photons, in order to destroy hydrogen molecules, which are very efficient gas coolants.
A computer simulation reported in July 2022 showed that a halo at the rare convergence of strong, cold accretion flows can create massive black holes seeds without the need for ultraviolet backgrounds, supersonic streaming motions or even atomic cooling. Cold flows produced turbulence in the halo, which suppressed star formation. In the simulation, no stars formed in the halo until it had grown to 40 million solar masses at a redshift of 25.7 when the halo's gravity was finally able to overcome the turbulence; the halo then collapsed and formed two supermassive stars that died as DCBHs of and.
Demography
Direct collapse black holes are generally thought to be extremely rare objects in the high-redshift Universe, because the three fundamental conditions for their formation are challenging to be met all together in the same gas cloud. Current cosmological simulations suggest that DCBHs could be as rare as only about 1 per cubic gigaparsec at redshift 15. The prediction on their number density is highly dependent on the minimum flux of Lyman–Werner photons required for their formation and can be as large as ~107 DCBHs per cubic gigaparsec in the most optimistic scenarios.In a 2023 study, N-body simulations combined with semi-analytic galaxy evolution models showed that at z ~ 10, halos with ~ to ~ typically host multiple DCBHs, which later merge into more massive halos. The study, utilizing the Press-Schechter model, further predicts that present-day halos with masses ranging from ~ to ~ contain DCBHs, a result supported by observed halo occupation fractions. This suggests that DCBH formation scenarios may account for a significant amount of supermassive black holes formed in the universe.
Previous research on the formation of DCBHs at high redshifts support this model, indicating that DCBHs formed abundantly in the early universe at redshifts around z~14 with rapid growth, where the presence of DCBHs enhanced the formation of additional DCBHs in a positive feedback loop. This process, which peaked at z~14 and declined by z~13, aligns with the predicted evolution of DCBH-hosting halos at lower redshifts, including present-day halos. The rapid early growth of DCBHs could lead to their merging into more massive halos, a process consistent with the observed evolution of these halos at lower redshifts. These findings suggest that DCBHs could be key contributors to the formation of supermassive black holes observed in later epochs.