ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Super-Eddington accretion has been suggested as a possible formation pathway of $10^9 , M_odot$ supermassive black holes (SMBHs) 800 Myr after the Big Bang. However, stellar feedback from BH seed progenitors and winds from BH accretion disks may decrease BH accretion rates. In this work, we study the impact of these physical processes on the formation of $z sim 6$ quasar, including new physical prescriptions in the cosmological, data-constrained semi-analytic model GAMETE/QSOdust. We find that the feedback produced by the first stellar progenitors on the surrounding does not play a relevant role in preventing SMBHs formation. In order to grow the $z gtrsim 6$ SMBHs, the accreted gas must efficiently lose angular momentum. Moreover disk winds, easily originated in super-Eddington accretion regime, can strongly reduce duty cycles. This produces a decrease in the active fraction among the progenitors of $zsim6$ bright quasars, reducing the probability to observe them.
Massive black holes (BHs) are at once exotic and yet ubiquitous, residing in the centers of massive galaxies in the local Universe. Recent years have seen remarkable advances in our understanding of how these BHs form and grow over cosmic time, durin
We investigate the rapid growth phase of supermassive black holes (BHs) within the hydrodynamical cosmological eagle simulation. This non-linear phase of BH growth occurs within $sim$$L_{*}$ galaxies, embedded between two regulatory states of the gal
The growth of the first super massive black holes (SMBHs) at z > 6 is still a major challenge for theoretical models. If it starts from black hole (BH) remnants of Population III stars (light seeds with mass ~ 100 Msun) it requires super-Eddington ac
We constrain the total accreted mass density in supermassive black holes at z>6, inferred via the upper limit derived from the integrated X-ray emission from a sample of photometrically selected galaxy candidates. Studying galaxies obtained from the
Obscured or narrow-line active galaxies offer an unobstructed view of the quasar environment in the presence of a luminous and vigorously accreting black hole. We exploit the large new sample of optically selected luminous narrow-line active galaxies