Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies

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Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies. / Vestergaard, Marianne.

In: Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 571, No. 2, 733, 05.04.2002.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Vestergaard, M 2002, 'Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies', Astrophysical Journal, vol. 571, no. 2, 733. https://doi.org/10.1086/340045

APA

Vestergaard, M. (2002). Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies. Astrophysical Journal, 571(2), [733]. https://doi.org/10.1086/340045

Vancouver

Vestergaard M. Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies. Astrophysical Journal. 2002 Apr 5;571(2). 733. https://doi.org/10.1086/340045

Author

Vestergaard, Marianne. / Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies. In: Astrophysical Journal. 2002 ; Vol. 571, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{f46dbed968a24c8f873dcc844581250d,
title = "Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies",
abstract = "An empirical relationship, of particular interest for studies of high redshift active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and quasars, between the masses of their central black-holes and rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) parameters measured in single-epoch AGN spectra is presented. This relationship is calibrated to recently measured reverberation masses of low-redshift AGNs and quasars. An empirical relationship between single-epoch rest-frame optical spectrophotometric measurements and the central masses is also presented. The UV relationship allows reasonable estimates of the central masses to be made of high-redshift AGNs and quasars for which these masses cannot be directly or easily measured by the techniques applicable to the lower luminosity, nearby AGNs. The central mass obtained by this method can be estimated to within a factor of ~3 for most objects. This is reasonable given the intrinsic uncertainty of a factor less than 2 in the primary methods used to measure the central masses of nearby inactive and active galaxies, namely resolved gas and stellar kinematics in the underlying host galaxy and reverberation-mapping techniques. The UV relationship holds good potential for being a powerful tool to study black-hole demographics at high redshift as well as to statistically study the fundamental properties of AGNs. The broad line region size - luminosity relationship is key to the calibrations presented here. The fact that its intrinsic scatter is also the main source of uncertainty in the calibrations stresses the need for better observational constraints to be placed on this relationship. The empirically calibrated relationships presented here will be applied to quasar samples in forthcoming work.",
keywords = "astro-ph",
author = "Marianne Vestergaard",
year = "2002",
month = apr,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1086/340045",
language = "English",
volume = "571",
journal = "Astrophysical Journal",
issn = "0004-637X",
publisher = "Institute of Physics Publishing, Inc",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determining Central Black Hole Masses in Distant Active Galaxies

AU - Vestergaard, Marianne

PY - 2002/4/5

Y1 - 2002/4/5

N2 - An empirical relationship, of particular interest for studies of high redshift active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and quasars, between the masses of their central black-holes and rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) parameters measured in single-epoch AGN spectra is presented. This relationship is calibrated to recently measured reverberation masses of low-redshift AGNs and quasars. An empirical relationship between single-epoch rest-frame optical spectrophotometric measurements and the central masses is also presented. The UV relationship allows reasonable estimates of the central masses to be made of high-redshift AGNs and quasars for which these masses cannot be directly or easily measured by the techniques applicable to the lower luminosity, nearby AGNs. The central mass obtained by this method can be estimated to within a factor of ~3 for most objects. This is reasonable given the intrinsic uncertainty of a factor less than 2 in the primary methods used to measure the central masses of nearby inactive and active galaxies, namely resolved gas and stellar kinematics in the underlying host galaxy and reverberation-mapping techniques. The UV relationship holds good potential for being a powerful tool to study black-hole demographics at high redshift as well as to statistically study the fundamental properties of AGNs. The broad line region size - luminosity relationship is key to the calibrations presented here. The fact that its intrinsic scatter is also the main source of uncertainty in the calibrations stresses the need for better observational constraints to be placed on this relationship. The empirically calibrated relationships presented here will be applied to quasar samples in forthcoming work.

AB - An empirical relationship, of particular interest for studies of high redshift active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and quasars, between the masses of their central black-holes and rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) parameters measured in single-epoch AGN spectra is presented. This relationship is calibrated to recently measured reverberation masses of low-redshift AGNs and quasars. An empirical relationship between single-epoch rest-frame optical spectrophotometric measurements and the central masses is also presented. The UV relationship allows reasonable estimates of the central masses to be made of high-redshift AGNs and quasars for which these masses cannot be directly or easily measured by the techniques applicable to the lower luminosity, nearby AGNs. The central mass obtained by this method can be estimated to within a factor of ~3 for most objects. This is reasonable given the intrinsic uncertainty of a factor less than 2 in the primary methods used to measure the central masses of nearby inactive and active galaxies, namely resolved gas and stellar kinematics in the underlying host galaxy and reverberation-mapping techniques. The UV relationship holds good potential for being a powerful tool to study black-hole demographics at high redshift as well as to statistically study the fundamental properties of AGNs. The broad line region size - luminosity relationship is key to the calibrations presented here. The fact that its intrinsic scatter is also the main source of uncertainty in the calibrations stresses the need for better observational constraints to be placed on this relationship. The empirically calibrated relationships presented here will be applied to quasar samples in forthcoming work.

KW - astro-ph

U2 - 10.1086/340045

DO - 10.1086/340045

M3 - Journal article

VL - 571

JO - Astrophysical Journal

JF - Astrophysical Journal

SN - 0004-637X

IS - 2

M1 - 733

ER -

ID: 123370368