Academic literature on the topic 'Black hole and host galaxy masses'

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Journal articles on the topic "Black hole and host galaxy masses"

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Wu, Xue-Bing, Feige Wang, Xiaohui Fan, Weimin Yi, Wenwen Zuo, Fuyan Bian, Linhua Jiang, et al. "Discovery of a 12 billion solar mass black hole at redshift 6.3 and its challenge to the black hole/galaxy coevolution at cosmic dawn." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 11, S319 (August 2015): 80–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921315010066.

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AbstractThe existence of black holes with masses of about one billion solar masses in quasars at redshifts z > 6 presents significant challenges to theories of the formation and growth of black holes and the black hole/galaxy co-evolution in the early Universe. Here we report a recent discovery of an ultra-luminous quasar at redshift z = 6.30, which has an observed optical and near-infrared luminosity a few times greater than those of previously known z > 6 quasars. With near-infrared spectroscopy, we obtain a black hole mass of about 12 billion solar masses, which is well consistent with the mass derived by assuming an Eddington-limited accretion. This ultra-luminous quasar with at z > 6 provides a unique laboratory to the study of the mass assembly and galaxy formation around the most massive black holes at cosmic dawn. It raises further challenges to the black hole/galaxy co-evolution in the epoch of cosmic reionization because the black hole needs to grow much faster than the host galaxy.
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Baron, Dalya. "Probing black hole - host galaxy scaling relations with obscured type II AGN." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 15, S356 (October 2019): 365. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921320003373.

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AbstractThe scaling relations between supermassive black holes and their host galaxy properties are of fundamental importance in the context black hole-host galaxy co-evolution throughout cosmic time. Beyond the local universe, such relations are based on black hole mass estimates in type I AGN. Unfortunately, for this type of objects the host galaxy properties are more difficult to obtain since the AGN dominates the observed flux in most wavelength ranges. In this poster I will present a new correlation we discovered between the narrow L([OIII])/L(Hβ) line ratio and the FWHM(broad Hα). This scaling relation ties the kinematics of the gas clouds in the broad line region to the ionization state of gas in the narrow line region, connecting the properties of gas clouds kiloparsecs away from the black hole to material gravitationally bound to it on sub-parsec scales. This relation can be used to estimate black hole masses from narrow emission lines only, and thus brings the missing piece required to estimate black hole masses in obscured type II AGN. Using this technique, we estimate the black hole mass of about 10,000 type II AGN, and present, for the first time, M(BH)-sigma and M(BH)-M(stars) scaling relations for this population. These relations are remarkably consistent with those observed for type I AGN, suggesting that this new method may perform as reliably as the classical estimate used in non-obscured type I AGN. These findings open a new window for studies of black hole-host galaxy co-evolution throughout cosmic time.
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Schulze, Andreas, and Lutz Wisotzki. "An Estimate of the Local Active Black Hole Mass Function and the Distribution Function of Eddington Ratios." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 5, S267 (August 2009): 266. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921310006435.

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The observed relations between the black hole mass and the properties of the spheroidal galaxy component imply a close connection between the growth of supermassive black holes and the evolution of their host galaxies. An effective approach to study black hole growth is to measure black hole masses and Eddington ratios of well-defined type 1 AGN samples and determine the underlying distribution functions.
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Ricarte, Angelo, Michael Tremmel, Priyamvada Natarajan, and Thomas Quinn. "Tracing black hole and galaxy co-evolution in the Romulus simulations." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 489, no. 1 (August 23, 2019): 802–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2161.

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ABSTRACT We study the link between supermassive black hole growth and the stellar mass assembly of their host galaxies in the state-of-the-art Romulus suite of simulations. The cosmological simulations Romulus25 and RomulusC employ innovative recipes for the seeding, accretion, and dynamics of black holes in the field and cluster environments, respectively. We find that the black hole accretion rate traces the star formation rate among star-forming galaxies. This result holds for stellar masses between 108 and 1012 solar masses, with a very weak dependence on host halo mass or redshift. The inferred relation between accretion rate and star formation rate does not appear to depend on environment, as no difference is seen in the cluster/proto-cluster volume compared to the field. A model including the star formation rate, the black hole-to-stellar mass ratio, and the cold gas fraction can explain about 70 per cent of all variations in the black hole accretion rate among star-forming galaxies. Finally, bearing in mind the limited volume and resolution of these cosmological simulations, we find no evidence for a connection between black hole growth and galaxy mergers, on any time-scale and at any redshift. Black holes and their galaxies assemble in tandem in these simulations, regardless of the larger scale intergalactic environment, suggesting that black hole growth simply follows star formation on galactic scales.
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Hopkins, Philip F. "Quasars, Feedback, and Galaxy Formation." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 5, S267 (August 2009): 421–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921310006940.

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AbstractRecent observations of tight correlations between supermassive black hole masses and the properties of their host galaxies demonstrate that black holes and bulges are co-eval and have motivated theoretical models in which feedback from AGN activity regulates the black hole and host galaxy evolution. Combining simulations, analytic models, and recent observations, answers to a number of questions are starting to take shape: how do AGN get triggered? How long do they live? What are typical light curves and what sets them? Is feedback necessary and/or sufficient to regulate BH growth? What effects does that feedback have on the host galaxy? On the host halo? All of this also highlights questions that remain wide open: how does gas get from a few pc to the AGN? What are the actual microphysical mechanisms of feedback? What is the tradeoff between stellar and AGN feedback? And, if there are different “modes” of feedback, where/when are each important?
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Zubovas, Kastytis, and Andrew King. "Slow and massive: low-spin SMBHs can grow more." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 489, no. 1 (August 12, 2019): 1373–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2235.

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Abstract Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) probably control the growth of their host galaxies via feedback in the form of wide-angle wind-driven outflows. These establish the observed correlations between supermassive black hole (SMBH) masses and host galaxy properties, e.g. the spheroid velocity dispersion σ. In this paper we consider the growth of the SMBH once it starts driving a large-scale outflow through the galaxy. To clear the gas and ultimately terminate further growth of both the SMBH and the host galaxy, the black hole must continue to grow its mass significantly, by up to a factor of a few, after reaching this point. The mass increment ΔMBH depends sensitively on both galaxy size and SMBH spin. The galaxy size dependence leads to ΔMBH ∝ σ5 and a steepening of the M–σ relation beyond the analytically calculated M ∝ σ4, in agreement with observation. Slowly spinning black holes are much less efficient in producing feedback, so at any given σ the slowest spinning black holes should be the most massive. Current observational constraints are consistent with this picture, but insufficient to test it properly; however, this should change with upcoming surveys.
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Sahu, Nandini, Alister Graham, and Benjamin Davis. "The Morphology-dependent Black Hole–Host Galaxy Correlations: A Consequence of Physical Formation Processes." Acta Astrophysica Taurica 3, no. 1 (December 2, 2021): 39–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.31059/aat.vol3.iss1.pp39-43.

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For decades, astronomers have been investigating how the central supermassive black hole (BH) may govern the host galaxy’s properties and vice versa. Our work adds another step to this study. We have performed state-of-theart 2D modeling and multi-component photometric decompositions of the largest-to-date sample of galaxies with dynamically-measured black hole masses (MBH). The multi-component decomposition allows us to accurately extract the bulge (spheroid) stellar luminosity/mass and structural parameters (also for other galaxy components) and provides detailed galaxy morphologies. We investigated the correlations between MBH and various host galaxy properties, including the bulge (M*,sph) and total galaxy (M*,gal) stellar masses discussed here. Importantly, we analyzed the role of galaxy morphology in these correlations. Our work reveals that the BH scaling relations depend on galaxy morphology and thus depend on the galaxy’s formation and evolution physics. Here we discuss that in the MBH–M*,sph diagram, early-type galaxies (ETGs) with a disk, ETGs without a disk, and late-type galaxies (LTG-spirals) define distinct relations, with quadratic slopes but different zero-points. We also review the MBH–M*,gal relation, where ETGs and LTGs define different relations. Notably, the existence of the MBH–M*,gal relations enables one to quickly estimate MBH in other galaxies without going through the multi-component decomposition process to obtain M*,sph. The final morphology-dependent black hole scaling relations provide tests for morphology-aware simulations of galaxies with a central BH and hold insights for BH-galaxy co-evolution theories based on BH accretion and feedback.
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Eastwood, Daniel S., Sadegh Khochfar, and Arthur Trew. "Mass transport in galaxy discs limits black hole growth to sub-Eddington rates." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 488, no. 2 (July 17, 2019): 2006–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz1861.

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ABSTRACT Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) observed to have masses of $M_\bullet \sim 10^9 \, \mathrm{M_\odot }$ at z ≳ 6, <1 Gyr after the big bang, are thought to have been seeded by massive black holes that formed before growing concurrently with the formation of their host galaxies. We model analytically the idealized growth of seed black holes, fed through gas inflow from growing proto-galaxy discs. The inflow depends on the disc gravitational stability and thus varies with black hole and disc mass. We find that for a typical host halo, the efficiency of angular momentum transport, as parametrized by the disc viscosity, is the limiting factor in determining the inflow rate and the black hole accretion rate. For our fiducial case, we find an upper black hole mass estimate of $M_\bullet \sim 1.8 \times 10^7 \, \mathrm{M_{\odot }}$ at z = 6. Only in the extreme case of ∼1016 M⊙ haloes at z = 6 produces SMBH masses of ∼109 M⊙. However, the number density of such haloes is many orders of magnitude below the estimated 1 Gpc−3 of SMBHs at z = 6, indicating that viscosity driven accretion is too inefficient to feed the growth of seeds into $M_\bullet \sim 10^9 \, \mathrm{M_\odot }$ SMBHs by z ∼ 6. We demonstrate that major mergers are capable of resolving the apparent discrepancy in black hole mass at z = 6, with some dependence on the exact choice of orbital parameters of the merger.
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Komossa, S., J. G. Baker, and F. K. Liu. "Growth of Supermassive Black Holes, Galaxy Mergers and Supermassive Binary Black Holes." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 11, A29B (August 2015): 292–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921316005378.

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AbstractThe study of galaxy mergers and supermassive binary black holes (SMBBHs) is central to our understanding of the galaxy and black hole assembly and (co-)evolution at the epoch of structure formation and throughout cosmic history. Galaxy mergers are the sites of major accretion episodes, they power quasars, grow supermassive black holes (SMBHs), and drive SMBH-host scaling relations. The coalescing SMBBHs at their centers are the loudest sources of gravitational waves (GWs) in the Universe, and the subsequent GW recoil has a variety of potential astrophysical implications which are still under exploration. Future GW astronomy will open a completely new window on structure formation and galaxy mergers, including the direct detection of coalescing SMBBHs, high-precision measurements of their masses and spins, and constraints on BH formation and evolution in the high-redshift Universe.
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Peterson, Bradley M. "Toward Precision Measurement of Central Black Hole Masses." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 5, S267 (August 2009): 151–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921310006095.

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AbstractWe review briefly direct and indirect methods of measuring the masses of black holes in galactic nuclei, and then focus attention on supermassive black holes in active nuclei, with special attention to results from reverberation mapping and their limitations. We find that the intrinsic scatter in the relationship between the AGN luminosity and the broad-line region size is very small, ~0.11 dex, comparable to the uncertainties in the better reverberation measurements. We also find that the relationship between reverberation-based black hole masses and host-galaxy bulge luminosities also seems to have surprisingly little intrinsic scatter, ~0.17 dex. We note, however, that there are still potential systematics that could affect the overall mass calibration at the level of a factor of a few.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Black hole and host galaxy masses"

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Coatman, Liam. "A near-infrared view of luminous quasars : black hole masses, outflows and hot dust." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/269406.

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Supermassive black holes (BHs) and their host-galaxies are thought to evolve in tandem, with the energy output from the rapidly-accreting BH regulating star formation and the growth of the BH itself. The goal of better understanding this process has led to much work focussing on the properties of quasars at high redshifts, $z\gtrsim 2$, when cosmic star formation and BH accretion both peaked. At these redshifts, however, ground-based statistical studies of the quasar population generally have no access to the rest-frame optical spectral region, which is needed to measure H$\beta$-based BH masses and narrow line region outflow properties. The cornerstone of this thesis has been a new near-infrared spectroscopic catalogue providing rest-frame optical data on 434 luminous quasars at redshifts $1.5 \lesssim z \lesssim 4$. At high redshift, $z \gtrsim 2$, quasar BH masses are derived using the velocity-width of the CIV broad emission-line, based on the assumption that the observed velocity-widths arise from virial-induced motions. However, CIV exhibits significant asymmetric structure which suggests that the associated gas is not tracing virial motions. By combining near-infrared spectroscopic data (covering the hydrogen Balmer lines) with optical spectroscopy from SDSS (covering CIV), we have quantified the bias in CIV BH masses as a function of the CIV blueshift. CIV BH masses are shown to be over-estimated by almost an order of magnitude at the most extreme blueshifts. Using the monotonically increasing relationship between the CIV blueshift and the mass ratio BH(CIV)/BH(H$\alpha$) we derive an empirical correction to all CIV BH-masses. The correction depends only on the CIV line properties and therefore enables the derivation of un-biased virial BH mass estimates for the majority of high-luminosity, high-redshift, spectroscopically confirmed quasars. Quasars driving powerful outflows over galactic scales is a central tenet of galaxy evolution models involving 'quasar feedback' and significant resources have been devoted to searching for observational evidence of this phenomenon. We have used [OIII] emission to probe ionised gas extended over kilo-parsec scales in luminous $z\gtrsim2$ quasars. Broad [OIII] velocity-widths and asymmetric structure indicate that strong outflows are prevalent in this population. We estimate the kinetic power of the outflows to be up to a few percent of the quasar bolometric luminosity, which is similar to the efficiencies required in recent quasar-feedback models. [OIII] emission is very weak in quasars with large CIV blueshifts, suggesting that quasar-driven winds are capable of sweeping away gas extended over kilo-parsec scales in the host galaxies. Using data from a number of recent wide-field photometric surveys, we have built a parametric SED model that is able to reproduce the median optical to infrared colours of tens of thousands of AGN at redshifts $1 < z < 3$. In individual objects, we find significant variation in the near-infrared SED, which is dominated by emission from hot dust. We find that the hot dust abundance is strongly correlated with the strength of outflows in the quasar broad line region, suggesting that the hot dust may be in a wind emerging from the outer edges of the accretion disc.
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Books on the topic "Black hole and host galaxy masses"

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Blundell, Katherine. 6. How do you weigh a black hole? Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780199602667.003.0006.

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Infra-red observations have been used by teams in California and Germany to measure the mass of the black hole at the centre of the Galaxy at just over 4 million times the mass of our Sun. ‘How do you weigh a black hole?’ shows that similar dynamic techniques can be used to measure the masses of the millions of black holes that pervade our Galaxy as stars and black holes are frequently found as pairs in a binary system. The smallest black hole that we can measure is a few times the mass of our Sun, but the heaviest stellar-mass black holes can exceed a hundred times the mass of our Sun.
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Book chapters on the topic "Black hole and host galaxy masses"

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Marsh, David J. E., and Sebastian Hoof. "Astrophysical Searches and Constraints." In The Search for Ultralight Bosonic Dark Matter, 73–122. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-95852-7_3.

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AbstractStarting from the evidence that dark matter (DM) indeed exists and permeates the entire cosmos, various bounds on its properties can be estimated. Beginning with the cosmic microwave background and large-scale structure, we summarize bounds on the ultralight bosonic dark matter (UBDM) mass and cosmic density. These bounds are extended to larger masses by considering galaxy formation and evolution and the phenomenon of black hole superradiance. We then discuss the formation of different classes of UBDM compact objects including solitons/axion stars and miniclusters. Next, we consider astrophysical constraints on the couplings of UBDM to Standard Model particles, from stellar cooling (production of UBDM) and indirect searches (decays or conversion of UBDM). Throughout, there are short discussions of “hints and opportunities” in searching for UBDM in each area.
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Loeb, Abraham, and Steven R. Furlanetto. "Supermassive Black Holes." In The First Galaxies in the Universe. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691144917.003.0007.

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This chapter analyzes formation mechanisms for supermassive black holes, their observable characteristics, and their interactions with their host galaxies and the wider Universe. A black hole is the end product of the complete gravitational collapse of a material object, such as a massive star. It is surrounded by a horizon from which even light cannot escape. Astrophysical black holes appear in two flavors: stellar-mass black holes that form when massive stars die, and the monstrous supermassive black holes that sit at the center of galaxies, reaching masses of up to ten billion Suns. The latter type is observed as active galactic nuclei (AGN), and the chapter introduces the quasar—a point-like (“quasi-stellar”) bright source at the center of a galaxy which serves as the most powerful type of AGN—in discussing the observable nature of supermassive black holes.
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Mee, Nicholas. "Supermassive Black Holes." In The Cosmic Mystery Tour, 151–58. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198831860.003.0020.

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The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) is aiming to image the event horizon of the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy. Andrea Ghez has mapped out the orbits of stars around this supermassive black hole and deduced it has a mass of four million Suns. An even bigger supermassive black hole of six billion solar masses lies at the centre of the M87 Galaxy. Shep Doeleman has marshalled several of the world’s radio telescopes to form the EHT with the aim of imaging the event horizons of these black holes.
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Conference papers on the topic "Black hole and host galaxy masses"

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Gaskell, C. Martin, Daniel J. Whalen, Volker Bromm, and Naoki Yoshida. "The Origin of the Relationship between Black Hole Mass and Host Galaxy Bulge Luminosity." In THE FIRST STARS AND GALAXIES: CHALLENGES FOR THE NEXT DECADE. AIP, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3518867.

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