Do quasar broad-line velocity widths add any information to virial black hole mass estimates?
Scott M Croom (University of Sydney)

TL;DR
This study investigates whether quasar broad-line velocity widths contribute additional information to virial black hole mass estimates, finding that their impact is minimal and that mass estimates are largely driven by luminosity.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that measured broad-line widths add little information to virial black hole mass estimates, suggesting these estimates are primarily luminosity-dependent.
Findings
Broad-line widths contribute minimal additional information to mass estimates.
Mass estimates are effectively determined by luminosity, not line width.
Corrections to MgII virial masses do not alter the main results.
Abstract
We examine how much information measured broad-line widths add to virial BH mass estimates for flux limited samples of quasars. We do this by comparing the BH mass estimates to those derived by randomly reassigning the quasar broad-line widths to different objects and re-calculating the BH mass. For 9000 BH masses derived from the H_beta line we find that the distributions of original and randomized BH masses in the M_BH-redshift plane and the M_BH-luminosity plane are formally identical. A 2D KS test does not find a difference at >90% confidence. For the MgII line (32000 quasars) we do find very significant differences between the randomized and original BH masses, but the amplitude of the difference is still small. The difference for the CIV line (14000 quasars) is 2-3sigma and again the amplitude of the difference is small. Subdividing the data into redshift and luminosity bins we…
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.
