The Black Hole-Bulge Mass Relation Including Dwarf Galaxies Hosting Active Galactic Nuclei

We present a new relationship between central black hole (BH) mass and host galaxy stellar bulge mass extending to the lowest BH masses known in dwarf galaxies (MBH 105 M ; M ∼ 109 M ). We have obtained visible and near-infrared Hubble Space Telescope imaging of seven dwarf galaxies with optically s...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2019-12, Vol.887 (2), p.245
Hauptverfasser: Schutte, Zachary, Reines, Amy E., Greene, Jenny E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present a new relationship between central black hole (BH) mass and host galaxy stellar bulge mass extending to the lowest BH masses known in dwarf galaxies (MBH 105 M ; M ∼ 109 M ). We have obtained visible and near-infrared Hubble Space Telescope imaging of seven dwarf galaxies with optically selected broad-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and BH mass estimates from single-epoch spectroscopy. We perform 2D photometric modeling with GALFIT to decompose the structure of these galaxies and find that the majority have an inner bulge/pseudo-bulge component with an exponential disk that dominates the total stellar mass. Using the modeling results and color-dependent mass-to-light ratios, we determine the stellar mass of each photometric component in each galaxy. We determine the MBH-Mbulge relation using a total of 12 dwarf galaxies hosting broad-line AGNs, along with a comparison sample of 88 galaxies with dynamical BH masses and 37 reverberation-mapped AGNs. We find a strong correlation between BH mass and bulge mass with . The near-linear slope and normalization are in good agreement with correlations found previously when only considering higher-mass systems. This work has quadrupled the number of dwarf galaxies on the BH-bulge mass relation, with implications for BH seeding and predictions for gravitational wave detections of merging BHs at higher redshifts with LISA.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/ab35dd