Local samples of quiescent galaxies with dynamically measured black hole
masses (Mbh) may suffer from an angular resolution-related selection effect,
which could bias the observed scaling relations between Mbh and host galaxy
properties away from the intrinsic relations. In particular, previous work has
shown that the observed Mbh-Mstar (stellar mass) relation is more strongly
biased than the Mbh-sigma (velocity dispersion) relation. Local samples of
active galactic nuclei (AGN) do not suffer from this selection effect, as in
these samples Mbh is estimated from megamasers and/or reverberation
mapping-based techniques. With the exception of megamasers, Mbh-estimates in
these AGN samples are proportional to a virial coefficient fvir. Direct
modelling of the broad line region suggests that fvir~3.5. However, this
results in a Mbh-Mstar relation for AGN which lies below and is steeper than
the one observed for quiescent black hole samples. A similar though milder
trend is seen for the Mbh-sigma relation. Matching the high-mass end of the
Mbh-Mstar and Mbh-sigma relations observed in quiescent samples requires
fvir~15 and fvir~7, respectively. On the other hand, fvir~3.5 yields Mbh-sigma
and Mbh-Mstar relations for AGN which are remarkably consistent with the
expected `intrinsic' correlations for quiescent samples (i.e., once account has
been made of the angular resolution-related selection effect), providing
additional evidence that the sample of local quiescent black holes is biased.
We also show that, as is the case for quiescent black holes, the Mbh-Mstar
scaling relation of AGN is driven by velocity dispersion, thus providing
additional key constraints to black hole-galaxy co-evolution models.Comment: 15 pages, 5 Figures. MNRAS, accepte