A synthesis model for AGN evolution: supermassive black holes growth and feedback modes
Andrea Merloni (MPE), Sebastian Heinz (UW-Madison)

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive model for AGN evolution and supermassive black hole growth, revealing new insights into accretion rates, downsizing behavior, and feedback mechanisms across cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces an empirical coupling of SMBH mass and luminosity functions without assuming specific Eddington ratio distributions, and explores the evolution of AGN feedback efficiencies.
Findings
SMBH mass function evolves anti-hierarchically at z<1.5.
Hints of a reversal of downsizing at z~2.
Derived tight constraints on AGN radiative efficiency.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive synthesis model for the AGN evolution and the growth of supermassive black holes in the Universe. We solve the continuity equation for SMBH mass function using the locally determined one as a boundary condition, and the hard X-ray luminosity function as tracer of the AGN growth rate distribution, supplemented with a luminosity-dependent bolometric correction and an absorbing column distribution. Differently from most previous semi-analytic and numerical models, we do not assume any specific distribution of Eddington ratios, rather we determine it empirically by coupling the mass and luminosity functions. SMBH show a very broad accretion rate distribution, and we discuss the consequences of this fact for our understanding of observed AGN fractions in galaxies. We confirm previous results and demonstrate that, at least for z<1.5, SMBH mass function evolves…
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