Evolution of active galactic nuclei
Andrea Merloni, Sebastian Heinz

TL;DR
This paper reviews the evolution of active galactic nuclei (AGN), focusing on supermassive black holes, their growth, feedback mechanisms, and their role in cosmic history, highlighting recent observational and theoretical advances.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of AGN evolution, emphasizing physical relationships, scaling relations, and the role of feedback in black hole growth and galaxy evolution.
Findings
Evolution of SMBH and host galaxy scaling relations
Constraints on SMBH mass function evolution
Insights into AGN feedback mechanisms
Abstract
[Abriged] Supermassive black holes (SMBH) lurk in the nuclei of most massive galaxies, perhaps in all of them. The tight observed scaling relations between SMBH masses and structural properties of their host spheroids likely indicate that the processes fostering the growth of both components are physically linked, despite the many orders of magnitude difference in their physical size. This chapter discusses how we constrain the evolution of SMBH, probed by their actively growing phases, when they shine as active galactic nuclei (AGN) with luminosities often in excess of that of the entire stellar population of their host galaxies. Following loosely the chronological developments of the field, we begin by discussing early evolutionary studies, when AGN represented beacons of light probing the most distant reaches of the universe and were used as tracers of the large scale structure. This…
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