Observational Evidence for Cosmological Coupling of Black Holes and its Implications for an Astrophysical Source of Dark Energy

Farrah, Duncan and Croker, Kevin S. and Zevin, Michael and Tarlé, Gregory and Faraoni, Valerio and Petty, Sara and Afonso, Jose and Fernandez, Nicolas and Nishimura, Kurtis A. and Pearson, Chris and Wang, Lingyu and Clements, David L and Efstathiou, Andreas and Hatziminaoglou, Evanthia and Lacy, Mark and McPartland, Conor and Pitchford, Lura K and Sakai, Nobuyuki and Weiner, Joel (2023) Observational Evidence for Cosmological Coupling of Black Holes and its Implications for an Astrophysical Source of Dark Energy. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 944 (2). L31. ISSN 2041-8205

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Abstract

Observations have found black holes spanning 10 orders of magnitude in mass across most of cosmic history. The Kerr black hole solution is, however, provisional as its behavior at infinity is incompatible with an expanding universe. Black hole models with realistic behavior at infinity predict that the gravitating mass of a black hole can increase with the expansion of the universe independently of accretion or mergers, in a manner that depends on the black hole's interior solution. We test this prediction by considering the growth of supermassive black holes in elliptical galaxies over 0 < z ≲ 2.5. We find evidence for cosmologically coupled mass growth among these black holes, with zero cosmological coupling excluded at 99.98% confidence. The redshift dependence of the mass growth implies that, at z ≲ 7, black holes contribute an effectively constant cosmological energy density to Friedmann's equations. The continuity equation then requires that black holes contribute cosmologically as vacuum energy. We further show that black hole production from the cosmic star formation history gives the value of ΩΛ measured by Planck while being consistent with constraints from massive compact halo objects. We thus propose that stellar remnant black holes are the astrophysical origin of dark energy, explaining the onset of accelerating expansion at z ∼ 0.7.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Library Press > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openlibrarypress.com
Date Deposited: 18 Apr 2023 05:42
Last Modified: 18 Apr 2023 05:42
URI: https://openlibrarypress.com/id/eprint/1061

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