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Creators/Authors contains: "Li, Zhaozhou"

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  1. Aims.The scenario of feedback-free starbursts (FFB), which predicts excessively bright galaxies at cosmic dawn as observed using JWST, may provide a natural setting for black hole (BH) growth. This involves the formation of intermediate-mass seed BHs and their runaway mergers into super-massive BHs with high BH-to-stellar mass ratios and low Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) luminosities. Methods.We present a scenario of merger-driven BH growth in FFB galaxies and study its feasibility. Results.Black hole seeds form within the building blocks of the FFB galaxies, namely, thousands of compact star clusters, each starbursting in a free-fall time of a few million years before the onset of stellar and supernova feedback. The BH seeds form by rapid core collapse in the FFB clusters, in a few free-fall times, which is sped up by the migration of massive stars due to the young, broad stellar mass function and stimulated by a “gravo-gyro” instability due to internal cluster rotation and flattening. BHs of ∼104 Mare expected in ∼106 MFFB clusters within sub-kiloparsec galactic disks atz​ ∼ ​10. The BHs then migrate to the galaxy center by dynamical friction, hastened by the compact FFB stellar galactic disk configuration. Efficient mergers of the BH seeds will produce ∼106 − 8 MBHs with a BH-to-stellar mass ratio ∼0.01 byz​ ∼ ​4 − 7, as observed. The growth of the central BH by mergers can overcome the bottleneck introduced by gravitational wave recoils if the BHs inspiral within a relatively cold disk or if the escape velocity from the galaxy is boosted by a wet compaction event. Such events, common in massive galaxies at high redshifts, can also help by speeding up the inward BH migration and by providing central gas to assist with the final parsec problem. Conclusions.The cold disk version of the FFB scenario provides a feasible route for the formation of supermassive BHs. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  2. Abstract We analyze the evolution of massive (log10[M/M] > 10) galaxies atz∼ 1–4 selected from JWST Cosmic Evolution Early Release Survey (CEERS). We infer the physical properties of all galaxies in the CEERS NIRCam imaging through spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting withdense basisto select a sample of high-redshift massive galaxies. Where available we include constraints from additional CEERS observing modes, including 18 sources with MIRI photometric coverage, and 28 sources with spectroscopic confirmations from NIRSpec or NIRCam WFSS. We sample the recovered posteriors in stellar mass from SED fitting to infer the volume densities of massive galaxies across cosmic time, taking into consideration the potential for sample contamination by active galactic nuclei. We find that the evolving abundance of massive galaxies tracks expectations based on a constant baryon conversion efficiency in dark matter halos forz∼ 1–4. At higher redshifts, we observe an excess abundance of massive galaxies relative to this simple model, resulting in a shallower decline of observed volume densities of massive galaxies. These higher abundances can be explained by modest changes to star formation physics and/or the efficiencies with which star formation occurs in massive dark matter halos, and are not in tension with modern cosmology. 
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