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Pristine, atomically-cooled haloes are leading contenders for the sites of primordial quasar formation because atomic cooling triggers rapid baryon collapse that can create 10$^4$ - 10$^5$ M$_{odot}$ black hole seeds. However, until now no numerical simulations with a wide range of halo spins and assembly histories have followed the collapse for the times required to form a black hole. We have now performed cosmological simulations of baryon collapse in atomically-cooled haloes for times that are sufficient for supermassive stars to form and die as direct-collapse black holes (DCBHs). Our simulations reveal that fragmentation of the accretion disk at the center of the halo after $sim$ 500 kyr is nearly ubiquitous and in most cases leads to the formation of binary or multiple supermassive stellar systems. They also confirm that rapid baryon collapse proceeds for the times required for these stars to form DCBHs. Our discovery raises the exciting possibility of detecting gravitational waves from DCBH mergers with LISA and tidal disruption events in the near infrared with the James Webb Space Telescope and ground-based telescopes in the coming decade.
Population III stars can regulate star formation in the primordial Universe in several ways. They can ionize nearby halos, and even if their ionizing photons are trapped by their own halos, their Lyman-Werner (LW) photons can still escape and destroy
Supermassive stars born in pristine environments in the early Universe hold the promise of being the seeds for the supermassive black holes observed as high redshift quasars shortly after the epoch of reionisation. H$_2$ suppression is thought to be
We investigate the process of metal-free star formation in the first galaxies with a high-resolution cosmological simulation. We consider the cosmologically motivated scenario in which a strong molecule-destroying Lyman-Werner (LW) background inhibit
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
Direct collapse black holes forming in pristine, atomically-cooling haloes at $z approx 10-20$ may act as the seeds of supermassive black holes (BH) at high redshifts. In order to create a massive BH seed, the host halo needs to be prevented from for