Massive Galaxies in COSMOS: Evolution of Black hole versus bulge mass but not versus total stellar mass over the last 9 Gyrs?
Knud Jahnke, Angela Bongiorno, Marcella Brusa, Peter Capak, Nico, Cappelluti, Mauricio Cisternas, Francesca Civano, James Colbert, Andrea, Comastri, Martin Elvis, G\"unther Hasinger, Chris Impey, Katherine Inskip,, Anton M. Koekemoer, Simon Lilly, Christian Maier, Andrea Merloni

TL;DR
This study shows that the ratio of black hole mass to total stellar mass in massive galaxies at z~1.4 is similar to local bulge relations, suggesting bulge growth occurs mainly through internal mass redistribution rather than external star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the black hole to total stellar mass relation has not evolved since z~1.4, implying bulge growth via mass redistribution within galaxies.
Findings
Black hole to total stellar mass ratio remains constant from z~1.4 to present.
Bulge growth likely occurs through internal redistribution of disk mass.
No additional star formation or external mass needed for bulge growth.
Abstract
We constrain the ratio of black hole (BH) mass to total stellar mass of type-1 AGN in the COSMOS survey at 1<z<2. For 10 AGN at mean redshift z~1.4 with both HST/ACS and HST/NICMOS imaging data we are able to compute total stellar mass M_(*,total), based on restframe UV-to-optical host galaxy colors which constrain mass-to-light ratios. All objects have virial BH mass-estimates available from the COSMOS Magellan/IMACS and zCOSMOS surveys. We find zero difference between the M_BH--M_(*,total)-relation at z~1.4 and the M_BH--M_(*,bulge)-relation in the local Universe. Our interpretation is: (a) If our objects were purely bulge-dominated, the M_BH--M_(*,bulge)-relation has not evolved since z~1.4. However, (b) since we have evidence for substantial disk components, the bulges of massive galaxies (logM_(*,total)=11.1+-0.25 or logM_BH~8.3+-0.2) must have grown over the last 9 Gyrs…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
