A New Sample of Low-mass Black Holes in Active Galaxies
Jenny E. Greene (Princeton), Luis C. Ho (Carnegie Observatories)

TL;DR
This paper expands the sample of low-mass active galactic nuclei with black holes under 2 million solar masses, providing insights into their properties, host galaxies, and potential as gravitational wave sources.
Contribution
It significantly increases the known sample size of low-mass black holes in active galaxies, enabling better statistical and physical analyses of their characteristics and host environments.
Findings
Sample size increased to 174 objects.
Most objects are radiating near their Eddington limits.
Host galaxies are predominantly low-mass, late-type systems.
Abstract
We present an expanded sample of low-mass black holes (BHs) found in galactic nuclei. Using standard virial mass techniques to estimate BH masses, we select from the Fourth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey all broad-line active galaxies with masses < 2 x 10^6 M_sun. BHs in this mass regime provide unique tests of the relationship between BHs and galaxies, since their late-type galaxy hosts do not necessarily contain classical bulges. Furthermore, they provide observational analogs of primordial seed BHs and are expected, when merging, to provide strong gravitational signals for future detectors such as LISA. From our preliminary sample of 19, we have increased the total sample by an order of magnitude to 174, as well as an additional 55 (less secure) candidates. The sample has a median BH mass of <M_BH> = 1.3 x 10^6 M_sun, and in general the objects are radiating at high…
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