Observational constraints on the spin of the most massive black holes from radio observations
Alejo Martinez-Sansigre (ICG-Portsmouth), Steve Rawlings (Oxford)

TL;DR
This paper uses radio observations and simulations to constrain the spin distribution of supermassive black holes, revealing a bimodal distribution and slight evolution over cosmic time, with implications for black hole growth and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking jet efficiency to black hole spin, reproduces observed radio properties, and predicts a bimodal spin distribution with mild evolution.
Findings
Bimodal spin distribution with peaks near zero and maximal spin.
Radio loudness bimodality should be observable in quasars.
Slight increase in average black hole spin from z=1 to z=0.
Abstract
We use recent progress in simulating the production of magnetohydrodynamic jets around black holes to derive the cosmic spin history of the most massive black holes, with masses >~10^8 Msol. Assuming the jet efficiency depends on spin a, we can approximately reproduce the observed `radio loudness' of quasars and the local radio luminosity function. Using the X-ray luminosity function and the local mass function of supermassive black holes, SMBHs we can reproduce the individual radio luminosity functions of radio sources showing high- and low-excitation narrow emission lines. The data favour spin distributions that are bimodal, with one component around spin zero and the other close to maximal spin. In the low-excitation galaxies, the two components have similar amplitudes. For the high-excitation galaxies, the amplitude of the high-spin peak is typically much smaller than that of the…
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