Mass Functions of the Active Black Holes in Distant Quasars from the Large Bright Quasar Survey, the Bright Quasar Survey, and the Color-Selected Sample of the SDSS Fall Equatorial Stripe
M. Vestergaard (1), Patrick S. Osmer (2) ((1) Tufts University, (2), The Ohio State University)

TL;DR
This study derives the mass functions of distant active supermassive black holes in quasars from multiple surveys, revealing evolution in black hole populations and evidence of cosmic downsizing across redshifts.
Contribution
It provides new black hole mass functions across a wide redshift range, calibrated mass estimates, and insights into the evolution of active black hole populations.
Findings
Active black hole density increases from z~4 to z~2.5.
The z~4 mass function has a flatter high-mass slope.
Evidence of cosmic downsizing in black hole activity.
Abstract
We present mass functions of distant actively accreting supermassive black holes residing in luminous quasars discovered in the Large Bright Quasar Survey, the Bright Quasar Survey, and the Fall Equatorial Stripe of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The quasars cover a wide range of redshifts (0 <~ z <= 5) and were subject to different selection criteria and flux density limits. These samples are thus complementary and can help us gain additional insight on the true underlying black hole mass distribution, free from selection effects and mass estimation errors through future studies. We see evidence that the active z~4 black hole population is somewhat different than that at lower z. In particular, there is a sharp increase in the space density of the detected active black holes (M_BH >~ 10^8 Msun) between redshifts ~4 and ~2.5. Also, the z~4 SDSS quasar mass function has a somewhat…
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