Literature DB >> 30008487

Maximally rotating supermassive stars at the onset of collapse: the perturbative effects of gas pressure, magnetic fields, dark matter, and dark energy.

Satya P Butler1, Alicia R Lima1, Thomas W Baumgarte1, Stuart L Shapiro2,3.   

Abstract

The discovery of quasars at increasingly large cosmological redshifts may favour 'direct collapse' as the most promising evolutionary route to the formation of supermassive black holes. In this scenario, supermassive black holes form when their progenitors - supermassive stars - become unstable to gravitational collapse. For uniformly rotating stars supported by pure radiation pressure and spinning at the mass-shedding limit, the critical configuration at the onset of collapse is characterized by universal values of the dimensionless spin and radius parameters J/M2 and R/M, independent of mass M. We consider perturbative effects of gas pressure, magnetic fields, dark matter, and dark energy on these parameters, and thereby determine the domain of validity of this universality. We obtain leading-order corrections for the critical parameters and establish their scaling with the relevant physical parameters. We compare two different approaches to approximate the effects of gas pressure, which plays the most important role, find identical results for the above dimensionless parameters, and also find good agreement with recent numerical results.

Keywords:  black hole physics; equation of state; stars: Population III

Year:  2018        PMID: 30008487      PMCID: PMC6042249          DOI: 10.1093/mnras/sty834

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mon Not R Astron Soc        ISSN: 0035-8711            Impact factor:   5.287


  4 in total

1.  A luminous quasar at a redshift of z = 7.085.

Authors:  Daniel J Mortlock; Stephen J Warren; Bram P Venemans; Mitesh Patel; Paul C Hewett; Richard G McMahon; Chris Simpson; Tom Theuns; Eduardo A Gonzáles-Solares; Andy Adamson; Simon Dye; Nigel C Hambly; Paul Hirst; Mike J Irwin; Ernst Kuiper; Andy Lawrence; Huub J A Röttgering
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-06-29       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  An ultraluminous quasar with a twelve-billion-solar-mass black hole at redshift 6.30.

Authors:  Xue-Bing Wu; Feige Wang; Xiaohui Fan; Weimin Yi; Wenwen Zuo; Fuyan Bian; Linhua Jiang; Ian D McGreer; Ran Wang; Jinyi Yang; Qian Yang; David Thompson; Yuri Beletsky
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2015-02-26       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Black holes, disks, and jets following binary mergers and stellar collapse: The narrow range of electromagnetic luminosities and accretion rates.

Authors:  Stuart L Shapiro
Journal:  Phys Rev D       Date:  2017-05-30       Impact factor: 5.296

4.  An 800-million-solar-mass black hole in a significantly neutral Universe at a redshift of 7.5.

Authors:  Eduardo Bañados; Bram P Venemans; Chiara Mazzucchelli; Emanuele P Farina; Fabian Walter; Feige Wang; Roberto Decarli; Daniel Stern; Xiaohui Fan; Frederick B Davies; Joseph F Hennawi; Robert A Simcoe; Monica L Turner; Hans-Walter Rix; Jinyi Yang; Daniel D Kelson; Gwen C Rudie; Jan Martin Winters
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2017-12-06       Impact factor: 49.962

  4 in total

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