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Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University
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Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments

Jörg M. Colbergwith Tiziana Di Matteo

Carnegie-Mellon University

Page 2: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

The Simulation• Simulation just introduced by Tiziana

• 3,547 BHs at z=1, plus all their progenitors (4.5m total)

• Using haloes and full particle sets at some redshifts

Page 3: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

So what does a BH merger tree look like?

Page 4: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

The Black Hole-Halo Connection

• Most massive haloes host most massive BHs• At z=1, most active BHs live in haloes of mass

1012 Msun or less

Open circles: satellites, with (generally) low accretion

Page 5: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

The next step: BHs-Haloes-Environment

Satellite BHs in massive haloes

low-mass haloesand low-mass BHs in underdense regions

Low-mass haloes/BHs in wide range of environments!

Page 6: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

A bit of an aside: When do BHs form?

Hierarchical growth along this line Most massive BHs do not followhierarchical formation scenario

Page 7: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

More on environments and evolution

z=1

z=3

sat’s

reducedaccretion

Page 8: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

Smallest BHs oblivious of environment

Large number of m < 107 Msun BHs in 1011 – 1012 Msun haloes grow very slowly,independent of environment

Page 9: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

BH Assembly: Mergers vs. Accretion

• Only for the largest BHs, environmental effect on mergers vs. accretion: BHs in denser regions have slightly higher fractions of “merged” mass

Page 10: Supermassive Black Holes and their Environments Jörg M. Colberg with Tiziana Di Matteo Carnegie-Mellon University.

Summary• The most massive BHs live in the most massive haloes

etc.• BUT the most massive z=1 BHs aren’t necessarily the

most massive BHs at higher redshifts (c.f. Tiziana’s talk)• Environmental dependencies strongest for massive (>

108 Msun) BHs, both in mass, accretion rate, and mass assembly, and for satellite BHs (whose behaviour is consistent with their parent subhaloes having lost all their gas after infall into the larger halo)

• Most small (< 107 Msun) BHs grow thru very slow accretion, with no mergers, independent of environment, with high zf > 2.5

• Massive (> 108 Msun) BHs form anti-hierarchically, whereas smaller BHs form hierarchically