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Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10

We have performed cosmo-hydro simulations using the RAMSES code to study atomic cooling (ACHs) haloes at z=10 with masses 5E7Msun<~M<~2E9Msun. We assume primordial gas and H2-cooling and prior star-formation have been suppressed. We analysed 19 haloes (gas and DM) at a resolution of ~10 (prope...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Prieto, Joaquin, Jimenez, Raul, Haiman, Zoltan
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1730
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1509300
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author Prieto, Joaquin
Jimenez, Raul
Haiman, Zoltan
author_facet Prieto, Joaquin
Jimenez, Raul
Haiman, Zoltan
author_sort Prieto, Joaquin
collection CERN
description We have performed cosmo-hydro simulations using the RAMSES code to study atomic cooling (ACHs) haloes at z=10 with masses 5E7Msun<~M<~2E9Msun. We assume primordial gas and H2-cooling and prior star-formation have been suppressed. We analysed 19 haloes (gas and DM) at a resolution of ~10 (proper) pc, selected from a total volume of ~2E3 (comoving) Mpc3. This is the largest statistical hydro-sim. study of ACHs at z>10 to date. We examine the morphology, angular momentum (AM), thermodynamic, and turbulence of these haloes, in order to assess the prevalence of disks and supermassive black holes (SMBHs). We find no correlation between either the magnitude or the direction of the AM of the gas and its parent DM halo. Only 3 haloes form rotationally supported cores. Two of the most massive haloes form massive, compact overdense blobs. These blobs have an accretion rate ~0.5 Msun/yr (at a distance of 100 pc), and are possible sites of SMBH formation. Our results suggest that the degree of rotational support and the fate of the gas in a halo is determined by its large-scale environment and merger history. In particular, the two haloes forming blobs are located at knots of the cosmic web, cooled early on, and experienced many mergers. The gas in these haloes is lumpy and highly turbulent, with Mach N. >~ 5. In contrast, the haloes forming rotationally supported cores are relatively more isolated, located midway along filaments, cooled more recently, and underwent fewer mergers. Thus, the gas in these haloes is less lumpy and less turbulent (Mach <~ 4), and could retain most of its AM. The remaining 14 haloes have intermediate properties. If verified in a larger sample of haloes and with additional physics, our results will have implications for observations of the highest-redshift galaxies and quasars with JWST.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
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spelling cern-15093002021-05-03T20:08:41Zdoi:10.1093/mnras/stt1730http://cds.cern.ch/record/1509300engPrieto, JoaquinJimenez, RaulHaiman, ZoltanGas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10Astrophysics and AstronomyWe have performed cosmo-hydro simulations using the RAMSES code to study atomic cooling (ACHs) haloes at z=10 with masses 5E7Msun<~M<~2E9Msun. We assume primordial gas and H2-cooling and prior star-formation have been suppressed. We analysed 19 haloes (gas and DM) at a resolution of ~10 (proper) pc, selected from a total volume of ~2E3 (comoving) Mpc3. This is the largest statistical hydro-sim. study of ACHs at z>10 to date. We examine the morphology, angular momentum (AM), thermodynamic, and turbulence of these haloes, in order to assess the prevalence of disks and supermassive black holes (SMBHs). We find no correlation between either the magnitude or the direction of the AM of the gas and its parent DM halo. Only 3 haloes form rotationally supported cores. Two of the most massive haloes form massive, compact overdense blobs. These blobs have an accretion rate ~0.5 Msun/yr (at a distance of 100 pc), and are possible sites of SMBH formation. Our results suggest that the degree of rotational support and the fate of the gas in a halo is determined by its large-scale environment and merger history. In particular, the two haloes forming blobs are located at knots of the cosmic web, cooled early on, and experienced many mergers. The gas in these haloes is lumpy and highly turbulent, with Mach N. >~ 5. In contrast, the haloes forming rotationally supported cores are relatively more isolated, located midway along filaments, cooled more recently, and underwent fewer mergers. Thus, the gas in these haloes is less lumpy and less turbulent (Mach <~ 4), and could retain most of its AM. The remaining 14 haloes have intermediate properties. If verified in a larger sample of haloes and with additional physics, our results will have implications for observations of the highest-redshift galaxies and quasars with JWST.arXiv:1301.5567oai:cds.cern.ch:15093002013-01-24
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Prieto, Joaquin
Jimenez, Raul
Haiman, Zoltan
Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title_full Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title_fullStr Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title_full_unstemmed Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title_short Gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
title_sort gas infall into atomic cooling haloes: on the formation of protogalactic disks and supermassive black holes at z > 10
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1730
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1509300
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AT jimenezraul gasinfallintoatomiccoolinghaloesontheformationofprotogalacticdisksandsupermassiveblackholesatz10
AT haimanzoltan gasinfallintoatomiccoolinghaloesontheformationofprotogalacticdisksandsupermassiveblackholesatz10