ARTEMIS and EAGLE simulations classify L* galaxies by central BH-to-stellar-mass ratio and trace how merger history drives divergence in BH growth, star formation, and morphology, offering an explanation for the observed scatter and for MW/M31 differences.
Black Hole Mass Scaling Relations for Spiral Galaxies. I. $M_{\rm BH}$-$M_{\rm *,sph}$
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The (supermassive black hole mass, $M_\text{BH}$)-(bulge stellar mass, $M_{\rm*,sph}$) relation is, obviously, derived using two quantities. We endeavor to provide accurate values for the latter via detailed multicomponent galaxy decompositions for the current full sample of 43 spiral galaxies having directly measured $M_\text{BH}$ values; 35 of these galaxies have been alleged to contain pseudobulges, 21 have water maser measurements, and three appear bulgeless. This more than doubles the previous sample size of spiral galaxies with a finessed image analysis. We have analyzed near-infrared images, accounting for not only the bulge, disk (exponential, truncated, or inclined), and bar but also for spiral arms and rings and additional central components (active galactic nuclei (AGNs), etc.). A symmetric Bayesian analysis finds $\log\left(M_\text{BH}/M_{\odot}\right)=\left(2.44_{-0.31}^{+0.35}\right)\log\left\{M_{\rm*,sph}/[\upsilon(1.15\times10^{10}\,M_{\odot})]\right\}+(7.24\pm0.12)$, with $\upsilon$ a stellar mass-to-light ratio term. The level of scatter equals that about the $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma_*$ relation. The nonlinear slope rules out the idea that many mergers, coupled with the central limit theorem, produced this scaling relation, and it corroborates previous observational studies and simulations, which have reported a near-quadratic slope at the low-mass end of the $M_\text{BH}$-$M_{\rm*,sph}$ diagram. Furthermore, bulges with AGNs follow this relation; they are not offset by an order of magnitude, and models that have invoked AGN feedback to establish a linear $M_{\rm BH}$-$M_{\rm*,sph}$ relation need revisiting. We additionally present an updated $M_\text{BH}$-(S\'ersic index, $n_\text{sph}$) relation for spiral galaxy bulges with a comparable level of scatter and a new $M_{\rm*,sph}$-(spiral-arm pitch angle, $\phi$) relation.
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Co-evolution of Supermassive Black Holes and their Host L* galaxies: implications for Milky Way and M31
ARTEMIS and EAGLE simulations classify L* galaxies by central BH-to-stellar-mass ratio and trace how merger history drives divergence in BH growth, star formation, and morphology, offering an explanation for the observed scatter and for MW/M31 differences.