ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
A nearby source of Lyman-Werner (LW) photons is thought to be a central component in dissociating H$_2$ and allowing for the formation of a direct collapse black hole seed. Nearby sources are also expected to produce copious amounts of hydrogen ionising photons and X-ray photons. We study here the feedback effects of the X-ray photons by including a spectrum due to high-mass X-ray binaries on top of a galaxy with a stellar spectrum. We explicitly trace photon packages emerging from the nearby source and track the radiative and chemical effects of the multi-frequency source $(E_{rm photon} = rm{0.76 eV rightarrow 7500 eV}$). We find that X-rays have a strongly negative feedback effect, compared to a stellar only source, when the radiative source is placed at a separation greater than $gtrsim 1 rm kpc$. The X-rays heat the low and medium density gas in the envelope surrounding the collapsing halo suppressing the mass inflow. The result is a smaller enclosed mass compared to the stellar only case. However, for separations of $lesssim 1 rm kpc$, the feedback effects of the X-rays becomes somewhat neutral. The enhanced LW intensity at close separations dissociates more H$_2$ and this gas is heated due to stellar photons alone, the addition of X-rays is then not significant. This distance dependence of X-ray feedback suggests that a Goldilocks zone exists close to a forming galaxy where X-ray photons have a much smaller negative feedback effect and ideal conditions exist for creating massive black hole seeds.
Direct collapse models for black hole (BH) formation predict massive ($sim 10^5 M_{odot}$) seeds, which hold great appeal as a means to rapidly grow the observed $sim 10^9 M_{odot}$ quasars by $zgtrsim 7$; however, their formation requires fine-tuned
Observations of quasars at $ z > 6$ suggest the presence of black holes with a few times $rm 10^9 ~M_{odot}$. Numerous models have been proposed to explain their existence including the direct collapse which provides massive seeds of $rm 10^5~M_{odot
Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) of $sim 10^9, M_odot$ are generally believed to be the central engines of the luminous quasars observed at $zgtrsim6$, but their astrophysical origin remains elusive. The $zgtrsim$ quasars reside in rare density peaks
Direct collapse within dark matter (DM) halos is a promising path to form supermassive black hole (SMBH) seeds at high redshifts. The outer part of this collapse remains optically thin, and has been studied intensively using numerical simulations. Ho
We have modeled direct collapse of a primordial gas within dark matter halos in the presence of radiative transfer, in high-resolution zoom-in simulations in a cosmological framework, down to the formation of the photosphere and the central object. R