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From the very first stars to z~6 supermassive black holes

From the very first stars to z~6 supermassive black holes. Michele Trenti. A Century of Cosmology August 27, 2007 In collaboration with M. Stiavelli. PopIII stars. Stars formed from collapse of metal “free” (Z 10 -4 Z  ) gas

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From the very first stars to z~6 supermassive black holes

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  1. From the very first stars to z~6 supermassive black holes Michele Trenti A Century of Cosmology August 27, 2007 In collaboration with M. Stiavelli

  2. PopIII stars • Stars formed from collapse of metal “free” (Z10-4 Z) gas • At very high redshift (z>30) form within 105-106 M halos cooled by H2 • No fragmentation • very massive [O(100) M] • Drive initial metal enrichment in the universe • Provide Intermediate Mass Black Hole seeds A Century of Cosmology

  3. Bright z6 Quasar • Extremely rare objects: • on the sky one every ≈ 200 deg2 (Fan et al. 2004) • A simulation of ≈0.5 (Gpc/h)3 is needed just to have one such object • Their luminosity (MB≈ -27) is powered by accretion onto supermassive black hole • Expected to sit at the center of the biggest proto-clusters at that time (e.g., Springel et al. 2005) Courtesy of R. White, STScI A Century of Cosmology

  4. Bright z6 Quasar and PopIII • What is the relation between the very first PopIII stars and the bright z6 quasars? • When are the QSO BH seeds formed? • Is the quasar progenitor the first PopIII formed in the typical QSO volume? • How do QSO seeds grow? A Century of Cosmology

  5. Bright z6 Quasar and PopIII • 1013 dynamic range from a PopIII halo to the typical cosmic volume of a z 6 QSO • Outside the current capability of a cosmological simulation Bright z~6 QSO typical volume Pop III DM halo 1013 106 M 1019 M A Century of Cosmology

  6. From PopIII to Bright z~6 Quasars • We developed an original method, coupling N-body simulations with a linear theory Monte Carlo code • Details in Trenti & Stiavelli (2007), ApJ in press • (astro-ph/0705.4223) • DM halos at z=6 identified from the cosmological simulation • MC sampling of subgrid fluctuations provides the formation time of the first PopIII progenitor for every particle in the simulation A Century of Cosmology

  7. Results: large volume I Trenti & Stiavelli (2007) • (720Mpc/h)3, WMAP3 cosmology but 8=0.9 • PopIII halo massassumed: 106 M•/h • First PopIII halo in the box formed at z>49 • PopIII halo progenitor of most massive z=6 halo formed at z~41 Very First PopIII halo First QSO progenitor halo A Century of Cosmology

  8. Results: large volume II Trenti & Stiavelli (2007) • PopIII halo progenitor of most massive z=6 halo formed when there are already ~104 PopIII halos in the simulation box • Sitting at the top of a large z=6 overdensity gives little relative advantage to PopIII halos formed at z>40 A Century of Cosmology

  9. Understanding the result PopIII progenitor of QSO • (720Mpc/h)3 volume contains 1803 cells of mass Mqh = 4·1012M/h • z=6 most massive halo has ~6(Mqh) • Each Mqh cell has 1603 subcells at PopIII minihalo mass • ~ One in 103 cells has a PopIII progenitor formed earlier than the progenitor of the QSO • Back of the envelope estimate gives ~ 6 ·103 PopIII formed before QSO progenitor Trenti & Stiavelli (2007) A Century of Cosmology

  10. Results: small volume I Trenti & Stiavelli (2007) • (60Mpc/h)3 • PopIII halo mass assumed: 106 M•/h • First PopIII halo in the box formed at z~36 • PopIII halo progenitor of most massive z=6 halo formed at z~33 Very First PopIII halo First progenitor of most massive z=6 halo A Century of Cosmology

  11. Results: small volume II Trenti & Stiavelli (2007) • PopIII halo progenitor of most massive z=6 halo formed within the first ~102 PopIII halos virialized in the simulation • Not infrequent to be within the first 10 • Sitting at the top of a large z=6 overdensity gives a relative advantage when the total volume considered is small A Century of Cosmology

  12. Formation rate of the very first PopIII • Number of PopIII halos per unit z per (Mpc/h)3 • By z~30 enough PopIII halos to photo-dissociate all primordial H2 in the box (10-4 abundance assumed) • LW background may lead to delay of further PopIII formation, if feedback is negative A Century of Cosmology

  13. Do we have too many BH seeds? • Given the typical volume of a bright z=6 QSO about 104 IMBH seeds from PopIII stars are formed before the first QSO progenitor • All these seeds have enough time, if accreting at Eddington rate with ~0.1, to reach MBH>109M• by z~6 • What makes the QSO progenitor so special? A Century of Cosmology

  14. IMBH accretion: a simple model • Press-Schechter merger tree code • Seeds start growing at z=40 and are limited to accrete up to a fraction  of the gas supply of their halo • Limiting accretion to ~0.005 produces a reasonable z=6 QSO luminosity function A Century of Cosmology

  15. Conclusions • The most massive halos at z1>>z2 do not evolve into the most massive at z2 • The very first PopIII stars in the universe are not correlated with the largest halos at z~6, considered to host bright QSOs • QSO progenitors are still formed within the early era of PopIII, when LW background is unlikely to influence the minihalo evolution • A realistic QSO luminosity function can be obtained starting from the very first IMBH seeds assuming that accretion is limited up to a fraction of the total gas mass in the halo A Century of Cosmology

  16. Dark matter halos growth Trenti et al., in preparation • Where do the most massive halos at z=6 end up at z=0? • e.g.: (512Mpc/h)3 simulation: • None of the 10 most massive halos at z=6 ends up within the 10 most massive at z=0 Largest cluster at z=0 Most Massive z=6 z=6 z=0 [Figure from (60Mpc/h)3 box] A Century of Cosmology

  17. Troubles for Recursive Mesh Refinements? • Selecting the most massive structure at z=0 in a large volume and progressively refining it (e.g. see Reed et al. 2005, Li et al. 2007) does not lead to the very first PopIII in the box or even to the most massive z=6 halos. A Century of Cosmology

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