Low accretion rates at the AGN cosmic downsizing epoch
A. Babic, L. Miller, M.J. Jarvis, T.J. Turner, D.M. Alexander, S.M., Croom

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the observed cosmic downsizing of AGN is due to black holes accreting at lower rates or a shift in black hole mass, finding that declining accretion rates onto typical black holes explain the phenomenon.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of black hole masses and accretion rates in low-redshift AGN, showing that decreasing accretion rates drive cosmic downsizing.
Findings
Eddington ratios range from 10^{-5} to 1 with median -2.87
Black hole masses are typically around 10^8 solar masses
No evidence of low-mass black holes dominating at low redshift
Abstract
Context: X-ray surveys of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) indicate `cosmic downsizing', with the comoving number density of high-luminosity objects peaking at higher redshifts (z about 2) than low-luminosity AGN (z<1). Aims: We test whether downsizing is caused by activity shifting towards low-mass black holes accreting at near-Eddington rates, or by a change in the average rate of accretion onto supermassive black holes. We estimate the black hole masses and Eddington ratios of an X-ray selected sample of AGN in the Chandra Deep Field South at z<1, probing the epoch where AGN cosmic downsizing has been reported. Methods: Black hole masses are estimated both from host galaxy stellar masses, which are estimated from fitting to published optical and near-infrared photometry, and from near-infrared luminosities, applying established correlations between black hole mass and host galaxy…
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