News & Events

Wenzer Qin (Flatiron)

Event Details

McDonald Institute Seminar Series

Location: Queen's: STI 501 / YouTube

Date: April 2, 2026

Time: 12:30pm - 1:30pm

Add Event to Calendar
Dr. Wenzer Qin is a postdoctoral fellow in the Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics at New York University, working on theoretical cosmology and dark matter phenomenology.
 
Title: “Not-quite-primordial black holes”
Abstract: In this talk, I will discuss a new mechanism for the formation of seeds of supermassive black holes at early cosmic epochs. Enhanced density fluctuations with amplitudes that are not large enough to form primordial black holes post-inflation can still lead to collapsed dark matter halos at very early times. For halos forming prior to 1+z ~ 200, the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) is energetic enough to suppress the formation of molecular hydrogen, hence preventing cooling and fragmentation, as a consequence of which baryons falling into the potential well of the halo may undergo “direct collapse” into a black hole. I will show using a few illustrative models how this mechanism may account for the abundance of high-redshift black holes inferred from observations by the James Webb Space Telescope while remaining consistent with current limits from CMB spectral distortions. Limits on the primordial power spectrum are also derived by requiring that the universe not reionize too early.
 

The McDonald Institute seminar will be held in Stirling 501 and streamed live to the McDonald Institute YouTube channel.

A Zoom link is also available and shared via email by the organizers. Please reach out to admin@mcdonaldinstitute.ca for access.

 
nano footer.php