The First Black Holes in the Cosmic Dark Ages
Abstract
The main objective of the original work presented in this Thesis is to develop a theoretical framework to understand the growth, cosmological evolution and observational features of the first black holes, formed when the Universe was younger than ∼1 Gyr.
In the first part a growth model is assembled, based on the developed radiation hydrodynamic code GEMS (Growth of Early Massive Seeds). We find that the accretion onto a Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH) of initial mass M_0=10^5 solar masses occurs at an average, super-Eddington, rate 0.1 solar masses per year (about 1.35 times the Eddington rate), is intermittent (duty-cycle ≤50%) and lasts ∼100 Myr, during which the black hole can accrete only up to ∼20% of the available mass. Our model identifies a "feeding-dominated" accretion regime for massive DCBHs (≥10^{5-6} solar masses) and a "feedback-limited" one for light ones (≤10^{3-4} solar masses), the latter being characterized by intermittent (duty cycles ≤0.5) and inefficient growth, with recurring outflow episodes. We have also explored slim disk models, appropriate for super-Eddington accretion, in which outflows play a negligible role and a black hole can accrete 80%-100% of the gas mass of the host halo in ∼10 Myr. We find that the differential growth of light and massive DCBH seeds leads to a bimodal cosmological evolution in mass. In the second part we investigate the observational properties of these sources. The time-evolving spectrum emerging from the host halo of a DCBH is analyzed: the emission occurs predominantly in the observed infrared-submm (1-1000 μm) and X-ray (0.1-100 keV) bands. Such signal should be easily detectable by the JWST at ∼1 μm, and by ATHENA (between 0.1 and 10 keV). Deep X-ray surveys like the CDF-S could have already detected these systems. Based on this, we provide upper limits for the z≥6z≥6 black hole mass density for both accretion models. A photometric method to identify DCBH candidates in deep multi-wavelength surveys is developed: these sources are characterized by a steep spectrum in the infrared (1.6-4.5 μm), i.e. by very red colors. The method selects the only 2 objects with a robust X-ray detection found in the CANDELS/GOODS-S survey with z≥6. To date, the selected objects represent the most promising black hole seed candidates, possibly formed via the DCBH scenario, with predicted mass >10^5 solar masses. Finally, we note that the abrupt collapse of a massive and rotating object such as a DCBH is a powerful source of gravitational waves emission. We show that the predicted signal lies above the foreseen sensitivity of the DECIGO observatory in the frequency range (0.8-300) mHz, with a peak amplitude Ω_gw=1.1×10^{-54} at ν_max=0.9 mHz and a peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio ∼22 at ν=20 mHz.- Publication:
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Ph.D. Thesis
- Pub Date:
- August 2016
- DOI:
- 10.5281/zenodo.164889
- Bibcode:
- 2016PhDT........61P
- Keywords:
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- Astronomy;
- Astrophysics;
- Cosmology;
- Black Holes;
- Direct Collapse Black Holes;
- Super Massive Black Holes;
- Accretion Disks;
- AGN;
- Quasar;
- Gravitational Waves