336 research outputs found
The first massive black holes
I briefly outline recent theoretical developments on the formation of the
first massive black holes (MBHs) that may grow into the population of MBHs
powering quasars and inhabiting galactic centers today. I also touch upon
possible observational tests that may give insights on what the properties of
the first MBHs were.Comment: Very short review to appear in the proceedings of "First Stars IV",
held in Kyoto, Japan, May 201
Relations Between Central Black Hole Mass and Total Galaxy Stellar Mass in the Local Universe
Scaling relations between central black hole (BH) mass and host galaxy
properties are of fundamental importance to studies of BH and galaxy evolution
throughout cosmic time. Here we investigate the relationship between BH mass
and host galaxy total stellar mass using a sample of 262 broad-line active
galactic nuclei (AGN) in the nearby Universe (z < 0.055), as well as 79
galaxies with dynamical BH masses. The vast majority of our AGN sample is
constructed using Sloan Digital Sky Survey spectroscopy and searching for
Seyfert-like narrow-line ratios and broad H-alpha emission. BH masses are
estimated using standard virial techniques. We also include a small number of
dwarf galaxies with total stellar masses M_stellar < 10^9.5 Msun and a
sub-sample of the reverberation-mapped AGNs. Total stellar masses of all 341
galaxies are calculated in the most consistent manner feasible using
color-dependent mass-to-light ratios. We find a clear correlation between BH
mass and total stellar mass for the AGN host galaxies, with M_BH proportional
to M_stellar, similar to that of early-type galaxies with dynamically-detected
BHs. However, the relation defined by the AGNs has a normalization that is
lower by more than an order of magnitude, with a BH-to-total stellar mass
fraction of M_BH/M_stellar ~ 0.025% across the stellar mass range 10^8 <
M_stellar/Msun < 10^12. This result has significant implications for studies at
high redshift and cosmological simulations in which stellar bulges cannot be
resolved.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 15 pages, 12
figure
Active Galactic Nuclei outflows in galaxy discs
Galactic outflows, driven by active galactic nuclei (AGN), play a crucial
role in galaxy formation and in the self-regulated growth of supermassive black
holes (BHs). AGN feedback couples to and affects gas, rather than stars, and in
many, if not most, gas-rich galaxies cold gas is rotationally supported and
settles in a disc. We present a 2D analytical model for AGN-driven outflows in
a gaseous disc and demonstrate the main improvements, compared to existing 1D
solutions. We find significant differences for the outflow dynamics and wind
efficiency. The outflow is energy-driven due to inefficient cooling up to a
certain AGN luminosity (erg/s in our fiducial model), above which
the outflow remains momentum-driven in the disc up to galactic scales. We
reproduce results of 3D simulations that gas is preferentially ejected
perpendicular to the disc and find that the fraction of ejected interstellar
medium is lower than in 1D models. The recovery time of gas in the disc,
defined as the freefall time from the radius to which the AGN pushes the ISM at
most, is remarkably short, of the order 1Myr. This indicates that AGN-driven
winds cannot suppress BH growth for long. Without the inclusion of supernova
feedback, we find a scaling of the black hole mass with the halo velocity
dispersion of .Comment: 22 pages, 22 figures, published in MNRA
The case for super-critical accretion onto massive black holes at high redshift
Short-lived intermittent phases of super-critical (super-Eddington) growth,
coupled with star formation via positive feedback, may account for early growth
of massive black holes (MBH) and coevolution with their host spheroids. We
estimate the possible growth rates and duty cycles of these episodes, both
assuming slim accretion disk solutions, and adopting the results of recent
numerical simulations. The angular momentum of gas joining the accretion disk
determines the length of the accretion episodes, and the final mass a MBH can
reach. The latter can be related to the gas velocity dispersion, and in
galaxies with low-angular momentum gas the MBH can get to a higher mass. When
the host galaxy is able to sustain inflow rates at 1-100 msunyr, replenishing
and circulation lead to a sequence of short (~1e4-1e7 years), heavily obscured
accretion episodes that increase the growth rates, with respect to an
Eddington-limited case, by several orders of magnitude. Our model predicts that
the ratio of MBH accretion rate to star formation rate is 1e2 or higher,
leading, at early epochs, to a ratio of MBH to stellar mass higher than the
"canonical" value of ~1e-3, in agreement with current observations. Our model
makes specific predictions that long-lived super-critical accretion occurs only
in galaxies with copious low-angular momentum gas, and in this case the MBH is
more massive at fixed velocity dispersion.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
A Catalogue of Galaxies in the HDF-South: Photometry and Structural Parameters
We describe the construction of a catalogue of galaxies in the optical field
of the Hubble Deep Field South. The HDF-S observations produced WFPC2 images in
U, B, V, and I, the version 1 data have been made public on 23 November 1999.
The effective field of view is 4.38 arcmin, and the 5 limiting
magnitudes (in a FWHM aperture) are 28.87, 29.71, 30.19, 29.58 in the U, B, V
and I bands, respectively. We created a catalogue for each pass-band
(I, V, B, U), using simulations to account for
incompleteness and spurious sources contamination. Along with photometry in all
bands, we determined on the I-selected catalogue (I)
structural parameters, such as a metric apparent size, derived from the
petrosian radius, an asymmetry index, light concentration indexes and the mean
surface brightness within the petrosian radius.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&ASS. The catalog
is available in the source and at
http://www.merate.mi.astro.it/~saracco/science.htm
Blossoms from black hole seeds: properties and early growth regulated by supernova feedback
Massive black holes (BHs) inhabit local galaxies, including the Milky Way and
some dwarf galaxies. BH formation, occurring at early cosmic times, must
account for the properties of BHs in today's galaxies, notably why some
galaxies host a BH, and others do not. We investigate the formation,
distribution and growth of BH `seeds' by using the adaptive mesh refinement
code Ramses. We develop an implementation of BH formation in dense,
low-metallicity environments, as advocated by models invoking the collapse of
the first generation of stars, or of dense nuclear star clusters. The seed
masses are computed one-by-one on-the-fly, based on the star formation rate and
the stellar initial mass function. This self-consistent method to seed BHs
allows us to study the distribution of BHs in a cosmological context and their
evolution over cosmic time. We find that all high-mass galaxies tend to a host
a BH, whereas low-mass counterparts have a lower probability of hosting a BH.
After the end of the epoch of BH formation, this probability is modulated by
the growth of the galaxy. The simulated BHs connect to low-redshift
observational samples, and span a similar range in accretion properties as
Lyman-Break Analogs. The growth of BHs in low-mass galaxies is stunted by
strong supernova feedback. The properties of BHs in dwarf galaxies thus remain
a testbed for BH formation. Simulations with strong supernova feedback, which
is able to quench BH accretion in shallow potential wells, produce galaxies and
BHs in better agreement with observational constraints.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, matched the published versio
Supermassive black hole mergers and cosmological structure formation
Massive black holes (MBHs), with masses in the range 10^3-10^8 Msolar, which
merge with a companion black hole of similar mass are expected to be the most
powerful source of gravitational radiation in the frequency range probed by
LISA. MBH binaries can be detected by LISA up to z~5-15. Gravitational waves
from MBH mergers can serve as a powerful tool to study the early evolution of
the MBH population, and possibly the role played by MBHs in the joint evolution
with their hosts. I review scenarios for the co-evolution of MBHs and
cosmological structures, where MBH seeds form in pre-galactic structures. These
black holes evolve then in a hierarchical fashion, following the merger
hierarchy of their hosts. Accretion of gas, traced by quasar activity, plays a
fundamental role in determining the two parameters defining a black hole, mass
and spin. Gravitational waves, together with observations in electromagnetic
bands, can help constrain the evolution of both MBH mass and spin.Comment: Invited review at the Sixth International LISA Symposiu
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