Radiatively Inefficient Accretion in Nearby Galaxies
Luis C. Ho (Carnegie Observatories)

TL;DR
This study investigates the accretion rates and radiative efficiencies of black holes in nearby galaxies, revealing that most operate in a radiatively inefficient mode consistent with low-luminosity AGN activity.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of nuclear luminosities and Eddington ratios, demonstrating that accretion in nearby galaxies is predominantly radiatively inefficient and driven by local processes.
Findings
Accretion rates vary over 7-8 orders of magnitude.
Most black holes operate in a radiatively inefficient mode.
Local mass loss and hot gas accretion can fuel observed luminosities.
Abstract
We use new central stellar velocity dispersions and nuclear X-ray and Halpha luminosities for the Palomar survey of nearby galaxies to investigate the distribution of nuclear bolometric luminosities and Eddington ratios for their central black holes (BHs). This information helps to constrain the nature of their accretion flows and the physical drivers that control the spectral diversity of nearby active galactic nuclei. The characteristic values of the bolometric luminosities and Eddington ratios, which span over 7-8 orders of magnitude, from L_bol < 10^37 to 3 X 10^44 erg/s and L_bol/L_Edd ~ 10^-9 to 10^-1, vary systematically with nuclear spectral classification, increasing along the sequence absorption-line nuclei --> transition objects --> LINERs --> Seyferts. The Eddington ratio also increases from early-type to late-type galaxies. We show that the very modest accretion rates…
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