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Showing votes from 2021-09-10 12:30 to 2021-09-14 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday Aug 5th, 10:30 am.
If primordial black holes (PBHs) seeded the supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at the centers of high-redshift quasars, then the gas surrounding these black holes may reveal nucleosynthetic clues to their primordial origins. We present predictions of altered primordial abundances around PBHs massive enough to seed SMBHs at z~6-7.5. We find that if PBHs with initial masses of ~10^5 M$_{\odot}$ are responsible for such SMBHs, they may produce primordial Deuterium and Helium fractions enhanced by >~ 10%, and Lithium abundance depleted by >~10%, at distances of up to ~ a comoving kiloparsec away from the black hole after decoupling. We estimate that ~ 10^8 M$_{\odot}$ of gas is enhanced (or depleted) by at least one percent. Evidence of these modified primordial Deuterium, Helium, and Lithium abundances could still be present if this circum-PBH gas remains unaccreted by the SMBH and in or near the host galaxies of high-redshift quasars. Measuring the abundance anomalies will be challenging, but could offer a novel way to reveal the primordial origin of such SMBH seeds.
Several satellite missions have uncovered a series of potential anomalies in the fluctuation spectrum of the cosmic microwave background temperature, including: (1) an unexpectedly low level of correlation at large angles, manifested via the angular correlation function, C(theta); and (2) missing power in the low multipole moments of the angular power spectrum, C_ell. Their origin is still debated, however, due to a persistent lack of clarity concerning the seeding of quantum fluctuations in the early Universe. A likely explanation for the first of these appears to be a cutoff, k_min=(3.14 +/- 0.36) x 10^{-4} Mpc^{-1}, in the primordial power spectrum, P(k). Our goal in this paper is twofold: (1) we examine whether the same k_min can also self-consistently explain the missing power at large angles, and (2) we confirm that the of this cutoff in P(k) does not adversely affect the remarkable consistency between the prediction of Planck-LCDM and the Planck measurements at ell > 30. We use the publicly available code CAMB to calculate the angular power spectrum, based on a line-of-sight approach. The code is modified slightly to include the additional parameter (i.e., k_min) characterizing the primordial power spectrum. In addition to this cutoff, the code optimizes all of the usual standard-model parameters. In fitting the angular power spectrum, we find an optimized cutoff, k_min = 2.04^{+1.4}_{-0.79} x 10^{-4} Mpc^{-1}, when using the whole range of ell's, and k_min=3.3^{+1.7}_{-1.3} x 10^{-4} Mpc^{-1}, when fitting only the range ell < 30, where the Sachs-Wolfe effect is dominant. These are fully consistent with the value inferred from C(theta), suggesting that both of these large-angle anomalies may be due to the same truncation in P(k).
We present a wave generalization of the classic Schwarzschild method for constructing self-consistent halos -- such a halo consists of a suitable superposition of waves instead of particle orbits, chosen to yield a desired mean density profile. As an illustration, the method is applied to spherically symmetric halos. We derive an analytic relation between the particle distribution function and the wave superposition amplitudes, and show how it simplifies in the high energy (WKB) limit. We verify the stability of such constructed halos by numerically evolving the Schr\"odinger-Poisson system. The algorithm provides an efficient and accurate way to simulate the time-dependent halo substructures from wave interference. We use this method to construct halos with a variety of density profiles, all of which have a core from the ground-state wave function, though the core-halo relation need not be the standard one.