Weighing the Black Holes in z~2 Submillimeter-Emitting Galaxies Hosting Active Galactic Nuclei
D.M. Alexander (Durham), W.N. Brandt, I. Smail, A.M. Swinbank, F.E., Bauer, A.W. Blain, S.C. Chapman, K.E.K. Coppin, R.J. Ivison, K., Menendez-Delmestre

TL;DR
This study estimates black hole masses in z~2 submillimeter galaxies hosting active nuclei, revealing they are smaller than expected for their host galaxies and grow more slowly than the galaxies themselves.
Contribution
First direct black hole mass measurements in z~2 SMGs using virial estimators, linking black hole growth to galaxy evolution.
Findings
Black holes in SMGs are ~3 times smaller than in similar local galaxies.
Black hole growth lags behind host galaxy growth in SMGs.
SMGs' black holes will grow by a factor of ~6 to match local relations.
Abstract
We place direct observational constraints on the black-hole masses of the cosmologically important z~2 submillimeter-emitting galaxy (SMG; f850>4mJy) population, and use measured host-galaxy masses to explore their evolutionary status. We employ the well-established virial black-hole mass estimator to 'weigh' the black holes of a sample of z~2 SMGs with broad Halpha or Hbeta emission. The average black-hole mass and Eddington ratio (eta) of the lower-luminosity broad-line SMGs (L_X~10^44 erg/s} are log(M_BH/M_sol)~8.0 and eta~0.2, respectively. These lower-luminosity broad-line SMGs lie in the same location of the L_X-L_FIR plane as more typical SMGs hosting X-ray obscured AGN and may be intrinsically similar systems, but orientated so that the rest-frame optical nucleus is visible. Under this hypothesis, we conclude that SMGs host black holes with log(M_BH/M_odot)~7.8; we find…
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