Beyond the Monsters: A More Complete Census of Black Hole Activity at Cosmic Dawn

Abstract

JWST has revealed an abundance of low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGN) at high redshifts (z > 3), pushing the limits of black hole (BH) science in the early Universe. Results have claimed that these BHs are significantly more massive than expected from the BH mass-host galaxy stellar mass relation derived from the local Universe. We present a comprehensive census of the BH populations in the early Universe through a detailed stacking analysis of galaxy populations, binned by luminosity and redshift, using JWST spectroscopy from the CEERS, JADES, RUBIES, and GLASS extragalactic deep field surveys. Broad Hα detections in 31\% of the stacked spectra (5/16 bins) imply median BH masses of 105.21 - 106.13~ M and the stacked SEDs of these bins indicate median stellar masses of 107.84 - 108.56 ~M. This suggests that the median galaxy hosts a BH that is at most a factor of 10 times over-massive compared to its host galaxy and lies closer to the locally derived MBH-M* relation. We investigate the seeding properties of the inferred BHs and find that they can be well-explained by a light stellar remnant seed undergoing moderate Eddington accretion. Our results indicate that individual detections of AGN are more likely to sample the upper envelope of the MBH-M* distribution, while stacking on ``normal" galaxies and searching for AGN signatures can overcome the selection bias of individual detections.

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