Abstract

Recent numerical simulations of the fragmentation of primordial molecular clouds in hierarchical cosmogonies have suggested that the very first stars (the so-called Population III) may have been rather massive. Here we point out that a numerous population of massive black holes (MBHs)—with masses intermediate between those of stellar and supermassive holes—may be the end product of such an episode of pregalactic star formation. If only one MBH with m• 150 M☉ formed in each of the minihalos collapsing at z ≈ 20 from 3 σ fluctuations, then the mass density of Population III MBHs would be comparable to that of the supermassive variety observed in the nuclei of galaxies. Since they form in high-σ rare density peaks, relic MBHs are predicted to cluster in the bulges of present-day galaxies as they become incorporated through a series of mergers into larger and larger systems. Dynamical friction would cause 50 (m•/150 M☉)1/2 such objects to sink toward the center. The presence of a small cluster of MBHs in galaxy nuclei may have several interesting consequences associated with it, such as tidal captures of ordinary stars (likely followed by disruption), MBH capture by the central supermassive black hole, and gravitational wave radiation from such coalescences. Accreting pregalactic MBHs may be detectable as ultraluminous, off-nuclear X-ray sources.

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