Abstract

Even if massive ($10\,M_\odot \lesssim M \lesssim 10^4 M_\odot$) primordial black holes (PBHs) can only account for a small fraction of the dark matter (DM) in the universe, they may still be responsible for a sizable fraction of the coalescence events measured by LIGO/Virgo, and/or act as progenitors of the supermassive black holes (SMBHs) observed already at high redshift ($z\gtrsim 6$). In presence of a dominant, non-PBH DM component, the bounds set by CMB via an altered ionization history are modified. We revisit the cosmological accretion of a DM halo around PBHs via toy models and dedicated numerical simulations, deriving updated CMB bounds which also take into account the last Planck data release. We prove that these constraints dominate over other constraints available in the literature at masses $M\gtrsim 20-50\,M_\odot$ (depending on uncertainty in accretion physics), reaching the level $f_{\rm PBH}<3\times 10^{-9}$ around $M\sim 10^{4}\,M_\odot$. These tight bounds are nonetheless consistent with the hypothesis of a primordial origin of the SMBH massive seeds.

Highlights

  • Despite several decades of direct, indirect, or collider searches, we are still ignorant of the nature of mark matter (DM) of the universe

  • We revisit the cosmological accretion of a dark matter (DM) halo around primordial black holes (PBHs) via toy models and dedicated numerical simulations, deriving updated cosmic microwave background (CMB) bounds which take into account the last Planck data release

  • We extend our previous calculation [11] to account for the accretion of the dominant, non-PBH DM particles onto PBH, which enhances the baryonic accretion and eventually the PBH luminosity constrained by the CMB, as a result of the increased gravitational potential felt by the baryons

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Despite several decades of direct, indirect, or collider searches, we are still ignorant of the nature of mark matter (DM) of the universe. Even under Eddington accretion conditions for the PBH surrounded by DM halos, CMB angular power spectra are not capable of testing the hypothesis that the SMBH detected already at high redshift are (seeded by) PBH. This remains a viable conjecture with interesting consequences for the cosmology of the dark ages on which we briefly comment upon in Sec. VI, where we report our conclusions

THE LUMINOSITY OF ACCRETING PBH
The Eddington limit
More realistic accretion scenarios
Regimes of validity
INCLUDING COSMOLOGICAL DM HALOS
Toy model
Numerical simulations
Semianalytical model
Impact of accretion onto DM halos
Analysis
The “SMBH problem”
Primordial SMBH?
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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