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We propose the formation of massive pristine dark-matter (DM) halos with masses of $sim 10^8~M_odot$, due to the dynamical effects of frequent mergers in rare regions of the Universe with high baryonic streaming velocity relative to DM. Since the streaming motion prevents gas collapse into DM halos and delays prior star formation episodes, the gas remains metal-free until the halo virial temperatures $gtrsim 2times 10^4~{rm K}$. The minimum cooling mass of DM halos is boosted by a factor of $sim 10-30$ because frequent major mergers of halos further inhibit gas collapse. We use Monte Carlo merger trees to simulate the DM assembly history under a streaming velocity of twice the root-mean-square value, and estimate the number density of massive DM halos containing pristine gas as $simeq 10^{-4}~{rm cMpc}^{-3}$. When the gas infall begins, efficient Ly$alpha$ cooling drives cold streams penetrating inside the halo and feeding a central galactic disk. When one stream collides with the disk, strong shock forms a dense and hot gas cloud, where the gas never forms H$_2$ molecules due to effective collisional dissociation. As a result, a massive gas cloud forms by gravitational instability and collapses directly into a massive black hole (BH) with $M_bullet sim 10^5~M_odot$. Almost simultaneously, a galaxy with $M_{star, rm tot}sim 10^6~M_odot$ composed of Population III stars forms in the nuclear region. If the typical stellar mass is as high as $sim 100~M_odot$, the galaxy could be detected with the James Webb Space Telescope even at $zgtrsim 15$. These massive seed BHs would be fed by continuous gas accretion from the host galaxy, and grow to be bright quasars observed at $zgtrsim 6$.
Using observations in the COSMOS field, we report an intriguing correlation between the star formation activity of massive (~10^{11.4}msol) central galaxies, their stellar masses, and the large-scale (~10 Mpc) environments of their group-mass (~10^{1
Observational studies of nearby galaxies have demonstrated correlations between the mass of the central supermassive black holes (BHs) and properties of the host galaxies, notably the stellar bulge mass or central stellar velocity dispersion. Motivat
There is now a large consensus that the current epoch of the Cosmic Star Formation History (CSFH) is dominated by low mass galaxies while the most active phase at 1<z<2 is dominated by more massive galaxies, which undergo a faster evolution. Massive
Using cosmological hydrodynamic simulations with physically motivated models of super-massive black hole (SMBH) formation and growth, we compare the assembly of Milky Way-mass ( $M_{mathrm{vir}} approx 7 times 10^{11}$ $M_{odot}$ at $z = 0$) galaxies
We explore for the first time the effect of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the dark matter (DM) and baryonic distribution in massive galaxies formed in hydrodynamical cosmological simulations, including explicit baryonic physics treatment. A