The relationship of SMBHs and host galaxies at z<4 in the deep optical variability-selected AGN sample in the COSMOS field
Abstract
We present the study on the relationship between SMBHs and their host galaxies using our variability-selected AGN sample (iAB ≤ 25.9,\ z ≤ 4.5) constructed from the HSC-SSP Ultra-deep survey in the COSMOS field. We estimated the BH mass (MBH=105.5-10\ M) based on the single-epoch virial method and the total stellar mass (Mstar=1010-12\ M) by separating the AGN component with SED fitting. We found that the redshift evolution of the BH-stellar mass ratio (MBH/Mstar) depends on the MBH which is caused by the no significant correlation between MBH and Mstar. Variable AGNs with massive SMBHs (MBH>109\ M) at 1.5<z<3 show considerably higher BH-stellar mass ratios (>1\%) than the BH-bulge ratios (MBH/Mbulge) observed in the local universe for the same BH range. This implies that there is a typical growth path of massive SMBHs which is faster than the formation of the bulge component as final products seen in the present day. For the low-mass SMBHs (MBH<108\ M) at 0.5<z<3, on the other hand, variable AGNs show the similar BH-stellar mass ratios with the local objects ( 0.1\%) but smaller than those observed at z > 4. We interpret that host galaxies harboring less massive SMBHs at intermediate redshift have already acquired sufficient stellar mass, although high-z galaxies are still in the early stage of galaxy formation relative to those at the intermediate/local universe.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.