Published January 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Hyper-Eddington black hole growth in star-forming molecular clouds and galactic nuclei: can it happen?

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Carnegie Institution for Science
  • 3. ROR icon University of Colorado Boulder

Abstract

Formation of supermassive black holes (BHs) remains a theoretical challenge. In many models, especially beginning from stellar relic ‘seeds,’ this requires sustained super-Eddington accretion. While studies have shown BHs can violate the Eddington limit on accretion disc scales given sufficient ‘fuelling’ from larger scales, what remains unclear is whether or not BHs can actually capture sufficient gas from their surrounding interstellar medium (ISM). We explore this in a suite of multiphysics high-resolution simulations of BH growth in magnetized, star-forming dense gas complexes including dynamical stellar feedback from radiation, stellar mass-loss, and supernovae, exploring populations of seeds with masses ∼1−10⁴M⊙⁠. In this initial study, we neglect feedback from the BHs: so this sets a strong upper limit to the accretion rates seeds can sustain. We show that stellar feedback plays a key role. Complexes with gravitational pressure/surface density below ∼10³M⊙pc⁻² are disrupted with low star formation efficiencies so provide poor environments for BH growth. But in denser cloud complexes, early stellar feedback does not rapidly destroy the clouds but does generate strong shocks and dense clumps, allowing ∼1 per cent of randomly initialized seeds to encounter a dense clump with low relative velocity and produce runaway, hyper-Eddington accretion (growing by orders of magnitude). Remarkably, mass growth under these conditions is almost independent of initial BH mass, allowing rapid intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) formation even for stellar-mass seeds. This defines a necessary (but perhaps not sufficient) set of criteria for runaway BH growth: we provide analytic estimates for the probability of runaway growth under different ISM conditions.

Copyright and License

This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model).

Acknowledgement

We thank Xiangcheng Ma and Linhao Ma for useful discussions and revisions of this draft. Support for the authors was provided by NSF Research Grants 1911233, 20009234, 2108318, NSF CAREER grant 1455342, NASA grants 80NSSC18K0562, HST-AR-15800. Numerical calculations were run on the Caltech compute cluster ‘Wheeler,’ allocations AST21010 and AST20016 supported by the NSF and TACC, and NASA HEC SMD-16-7592.

Funding

Support for the authors was provided by NSF Research Grants 1911233, 20009234, 2108318, NSF CAREER grant 1455342, NASA grants 80NSSC18K0562, HST-AR-15800. Numerical calculations were run on the Caltech compute cluster ‘Wheeler,’ allocations AST21010 and AST20016 supported by the NSF and TACC, and NASA HEC SMD-16-7592.

Data Availability

The data supporting the plots within this article are available on reasonable request to the corresponding author. A public version of the gizmo code is available at http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/~phopkins/Site/GIZMO.html.

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Additional details

Created:
November 25, 2024
Modified:
November 25, 2024