Cosmological Evolution of Supermassive Black Holes. II. Evidence for Downsizing of Spin Evolution
Yan-Rong Li, Jian-Min Wang, Luis C. Ho

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of supermassive black hole spins over cosmic time, revealing a mass-dependent pattern where high-mass black holes spin down at low redshifts, supporting a downsizing scenario in SMBH growth.
Contribution
It provides the first explicit mass-dependent model of SMBH spin evolution using the continuity equation and observational data, highlighting a transition from spin-up to spin-down phases.
Findings
Radiative efficiency increases with mass at high redshift
Efficiency drops significantly for high-mass black holes by z~0
Transition from prolonged to episodic accretion occurs around z~2 for massive SMBHs
Abstract
The spin is an important but poorly constrained parameter for describing supermassive black holes (SMBHs). Using the continuity equation of SMBH number density, we explicitly obtain the mass-dependent cosmological evolution of the radiative efficiency for accretion, which serves as a proxy for SMBH spin. Our calculations make use of the SMBH mass function of active and inactive galaxies (derived in the first paper of this series), the bolometric luminosity function of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), corrected for the contribution from Compton-thick sources, and the observed Eddington ratio distribution. We find that the radiative efficiency generally increases with increasing black hole mass at high redshifts (z>~1), roughly as \eta \propto M_bh^0.5, while the trend reverses at lower redshifts, such that the highest efficiencies are attained by the lowest mass black holes. Black holes…
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