Rapidly spinning massive black holes in active galactic nuclei: evidence from the black hole mass function
Xinwu Cao, Fan Li

TL;DR
This study investigates the growth and spin evolution of massive black holes in active galactic nuclei by comparing the black hole mass function of AGN relics with that of local galaxies, revealing that most massive black holes are rapidly spinning.
Contribution
It introduces a mass-dependent radiative efficiency model to better match the observed black hole mass functions, highlighting rapid spin in the most massive black holes.
Findings
Most black holes accrete at Eddington ratio ~0.2.
Mass-dependent radiative efficiency improves BHMF match.
Most >10^9 solar mass black holes are rapidly spinning.
Abstract
The comparison of the black hole mass function (BHMF) of active galactic nuclei (AGN) relics with the measured mass function of the massive black holes in galaxies provides strong evidence for the growth of massive black holes being dominated by mass accretion. We derive the Eddington ratio distributions as functions of black hole mass and redshift from a large AGN sample with measured Eddington ratios given by Kollmeier et al. We find that, even at the low mass end, most black holes are accreting at Eddington ratio ~0.2, which implies that the objects accreting at extremely high rates should be rare or such phases are very short. Using the derived Eddington ratios, we explore the cosmological evolution of massive black holes with an AGN bolometric luminosity function (LF). It is found that the resulted BHMF of AGN relics is unable to match the measured local BHMF of galaxies for any…
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