Supermassive black holes and their host spheroids II. The red and blue sequence in the M BH - M *,sph diagram

Abstract

In our first paper, we performed a detailed (i.e. bulge, disks, bars, spiral arms, rings, halo, nucleus, etc.) decomposition of 66 galaxies, with directly measured black hole masses, MBH, that had been imaged at 3.6~μ m with Spitzer. Our sample is the largest to date and, for the first time, the decompositions were checked for consistency with the galaxy kinematics. We present correlations between M BH and the host spheroid (and galaxy) luminosity, Lsph (and Lgal), and also stellar mass, M*,sph. While most previous studies have used galaxy samples that were overwhelmingly dominated by high-mass, early-type galaxies, our sample includes 17 spiral galaxies, half of which have MBH < 107~M, and allows us to better investigate the poorly studied low-mass end of the MBH - M*,sph correlation. The bulges of early-type galaxies follow MBH M*,sph1.04 0.10 and define a tight red sequence with intrinsic scatter ε = 0.43 0.06~dex and a median MBH/M*,sph ratio of 0.68 0.04\%, i.e.~a 2σ range of 0.1-5%. At the low-mass end, the bulges of late-type galaxies define a much steeper blue sequence, with MBH M*,sph2-3, indicating that gas-rich processes feed the black hole more efficiently than the host bulge as they coevolve. We additionally report that: i) our Sersic galaxy sample follows a less steep sequence than previously reported; ii) bulges with Sersic index n<2, argued by some to be pseudo-bulges, are not offset to lower MBH from the correlation defined by the current bulge sample with n>2; and iii) Lsph and Lgal correlate equally well with MBH, in terms of intrinsic scatter, only for early-type galaxies - once reasonable numbers of spiral galaxies are included, the correlation with L sph is better than that with Lgal.

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