bystander wrote:Maxing Out the Mass of Early Stars
NOVA | American Astronomical Society | 2017 Jun 16
Primordial supermassive stars might be responsible for the earliest supermassive black holes in our universe. But just how big can a star grow before it inevitably collapses into a black hole? ...
On the Maximum Mass of Accreting Primordial Supermassive Stars - T. E. Woods
et al
I was away from home for much of June this year, so I missed one of the most incredibly fascinating new hypotheses this summer. Namely this one:
How did the very young Universe build extremely massive black holes in a cosmic "blink of an eye"?
Artist's rendering of the accretion disk in ULAS J1120+0641, a very distant quasar
powered by a black hole with a mass two billion times that of the Sun.
Credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser
Evidence #1:
Quasars. Quasars are
supermassive black holes surrounded by an accretion disk (or torus) of gas and dust orbiting the black hole at dizzying speeds. Different parts of the torus orbit at different speeds. Various parts of the torus keep colliding and rubbing at one another at tremendous speeds, generating so much energy and light that quasars are definitely among the most luminous objects in the Universe, maybe
the most luminous.
Evidence #2: Although quasars are found over a wide range of distances and epochs of the Universe, they were
most common in the distant past.
Wikipedia wrote:
The peak epoch of quasar activity in the Universe corresponds to redshifts around 2, or approximately
10 billion years ago.
Evidence #3: Quasar SDSS J0100+2802.
University of Arizona wrote:
The discovery of this quasar, named SDSS J0100+2802, marks an important step in understanding how quasars, the most powerful objects in the universe, have evolved from the earliest epoch,
only 900 million years after the Big Bang, which is thought to have happened 13.7 billion years ago. The quasar, with its central
black hole mass of 12 billion solar masses and the
luminosity of 420 trillion suns, is at a distance of
12.8 billion light-years from Earth.
So, question:
How did the Universe build a 12 billion solar mass black hole, 3,000 times more massive than the supermassive black hole in the Milky Way, in only 900 million years???
You may think that's not so hard. There were some really massive stars in the very early Universe. In our own epoch, the most massive stars contain some
300 solar masses, but it has been suggested that the earliest generation of stars formed specimens that were far more massive, maybe... 1,000 solar masses? Suppose these first generation gargantuan stars collapsed directly into black holes, forming black holes of a thousand solar masses. So, in order to form a supermassive black hole of 12 billion solar masses, all you have to do is to form individual 1,000-solar mass black holes and have them merge... and you only need
twelve million such individual black holes and find a way to make them all merge into a single black hole?
Reality check. A 1,000-solar mass black hole is an intermediate-mass black hole.
Wikipedia wrote:
An intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) is a
hypothetical class of black hole with mass in the range 100 to one million[citation needed] solar masses: significantly more than stellar black holes but less than supermassive black holes. There is as yet no unambiguous detection of an IMBH, but the indirect evidence from various directions is tantalizing.
So according to Wikipedia, intermediate-mass black holes in the nearby universe are so rare that they must be considered hypothetical, and we can't be sure that they exist in the first place. You may argue with Wikipedia about this, but the intermediate-mass black holes are clearly rare in the nearby universe.
But in the very young universe, they were so common that you could not only produce 12 million of them, but you could also make all these 12 million IMBH merge, to produce one single supermassive black hole? In 900 million years?
Maybe not.
Let's considered black hole mergers. With ever more sensitive detectors of gravitational waves, humanity has managed to spot no fewer than
6 stellar-mass black holes merging into
3 more massive, but still stellar-mass black holes. That's a far cry from
12,000,000 intermediate-mass black holes merging into
1 single supermassive black hole.
So how did the Universe make SDSS J0100+2802, the 12 billion black hole, in only 900 million years?
Maybe through stars whose mass was not just 1,000 solar masses. Not even through stars whose mass was 10,000 solar masses. No, there may have been stars whose mass was some 100,000 solar masses - ~300 times as massive as the most massive stars in the nearby universe!
For comparison, imagine the fattest man on Earth, and then imagine another man 300 times fatter... no... that's not possible.)
How can you grow a star of 100,000 solar masses?
AAS Nova wrote:
Quasars — supermassive black holes that are actively feeding — have been observed with enormous sizes (billions of solar masses) at very large distances (redshifts of z > 6). These monsters pose a problem: how could they have accreted so much mass in so little time since the beginning of the universe?
One theory is that these black holes formed from the direct collapse of stars. The larger the original star before collapse, the better the chances that the resulting black hole will be able to grow quickly. But even theorized Pop III stars (which have hundreds of solar masses) would have to accrete at rates higher than believed possible to achieve the black-hole masses we observe so quickly. For this reason, the commonly invoked explanation now is
supermassive stars.
...
In ordinary star formation, halos of gas cool primarily due to emission by molecules. When these clouds cool, they fragment and then collapse into normal-sized stars.
In the supermassive star-formation scenario,
hydrogen molecules in primordial halos are broken down — possibly by ultraviolet radiation from nearby star formation.
This prevents the halos from cooling by molecular emission, instead
allowing them to grow to an enormous 107–108 solar masses before they start cooling due to atomic emission. At this point they finally collapse to form a star.
Stars forming via this scenario quickly grow to be very massive, as
the halo material falls onto the core at catastrophic rates of 0.01–10 solar masses per year. After a short period of this rapid accretion, the supermassive star then collapses into a black hole due to instability. But how massive could such a star grow before its collapse?
...
Imagine R1361a squared, and then some.
ESO/VLT/P. Crowther/C.J. Evans
Woods and collaborators found that for accretion rates above 0.1 solar masses per year, the supermassive stars generally collapsed into black holes at masses of
150,000–330,000 solar masses.
...
This also sets the maximum mass of the supermassive black holes formed by direct collapse of stars in the early universe. At hundreds of thousands of solar masses, these first quasars provide much more plausible seeds than Pop III stars for growing the billion-solar-mass monsters we observe at high redshifts. Supermassive stars may indeed be the key to the formation of the first and most luminous quasars in our universe.
So maybe that's how the very young Universe could build supermassive black holes in the blink of an eye.
By building supermassive stars in the blink of an eye, and collapsing them, in the blink of an eye, into "
massive intermediate mass black holes" of up to some 300,000 solar masses.
Hungry eater.
And then the newborn "massive intermediate mass black hole" could be left in peace to grow more massive by hungrily accreting gas from its vicinity in the extremely gas-rich and compact young Universe. Perhaps the enormous amounts of gas in the very young Universe would also have made it easier for binary black holes to merge,
compared with the situation in the nearby Universe.
Ann