The (black hole mass)-(host spheroid luminosity) relation at high and low masses, the quadratic growth of black holes, and intermediate-mass black hole candidates

Abstract

From a sample of 72 galaxies with reliable supermassive black hole masses M(bh), we derive the M(bh)-(host spheroid luminosity, L) relation for (i) the subsample of 24 core-Sersic galaxies with partially depleted cores, and (ii) the remaining subsample of 48 Sersic galaxies. Using (Ks)-band 2MASS data, we find the near-linear relation M(bh) ~ L(Ks)(1.10+/-0.20) for the core-Sersic spheroids thought to be built in additive dry merger events, while M(bh) ~ L(Ks)(2.73+/-0.55) for the Sersic spheroids built from gas-rich processes. After converting literature B-band disk galaxy magnitudes into inclination- and dust-corrected bulge magnitudes, via a useful new equation presented herein, we obtain a similar result. Unlike with the M(bh)-sigma diagram, which is also updated here using the same galaxy sample, it remains unknown whether barred and non-barred Sersic galaxies are offset from each other in the M(bh)-L diagram. While black hole feedback has typically been invoked to explain what was previously thought to be a nearly constant Mbh/Msph mass ratio of ~0.2%, we advocate that the near-linear Mbh-L and Mbh-Msph relations observed at high masses may have instead largely arisen from the additive dry merging of galaxies. We argue that feedback results in a dramatically different scaling relation, such that black hole mass scales roughly quadratically with the spheroid mass in Sersic galaxies. We therefore introduce a revised cold-gas 'quasar' mode feeding equation for semi-analytical models to reflect what we dub the "quadratic growth" of black holes in Sersic galaxies built amidst gas-rich processes. Finally, we use our new Sersic Mbh-L equations to predict the masses of candidate `intermediate mass' black holes in almost 50 low luminosity spheroids containing AGN, finding many masses between that of stellar mass black holes and supermassive black holes.

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