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The Black Hole Mass Scale of Classical and Pseudo Bulges in Active Galaxies

Abstract

The mass estimator used to calculate black hole (BH) masses in broad-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) relies on a virial coefficient (the "ff factor") that is determined by comparing reverberation-mapped (RM) AGNs with measured bulge stellar velocity dispersions against the MBHσM_{\rm BH}-\sigma_* relation of inactive galaxies. It has recently been recognized that only classical bulges and ellipticals obey a tight MBHσM_{\rm BH}-\sigma_* relation; pseudobulges have a different zero point and much larger scatter. Motivated by these developments, we reevaluate the ff factor for RM AGNs with available σ\sigma_* measurements, updated Hβ\beta RM lags, and new bulge classifications based on detailed decomposition of high-resolution ground-based and space-based images. Separate calibrations are provided for the two bulge types, whose virial coefficients differ by a factor of 2\sim 2: f=6.3±1.5f=6.3\pm1.5 for classical bulges and ellipticals and f=3.2±0.7f = 3.2\pm0.7 for pseudobulges. The structure and kinematics of the broad-line region, at least as crudely encoded in the ff factor, seems to related to the large-scale properties or formation history of the bulge. Lastly, we investigate the bulge stellar masses of the RM AGNs, show evidence for recent star formation in the AGN hosts that correlates with Eddington ratio, and discuss the potential utility of the MBHMbulgeM_{\rm BH}-M_{\rm bulge} relation as a more promising alternative to the conventionally used MBHσM_{\rm BH}-\sigma_* relation for future refinement of the virial mass estimator for AGNs.Comment: 2014, ApJ, 789, 1

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