The strong environmental dependence of black hole scaling relations
Sean L. McGee (Leiden)

TL;DR
This study reveals that black hole scaling relations significantly depend on the galaxy's environment, with central and satellite galaxies exhibiting distinct relations, impacting our understanding of black hole growth and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates the environmental dependence of black hole scaling relations, highlighting differences between central and satellite galaxies across multiple properties.
Findings
Central galaxies have a steeper Mbh - sigma relation than satellites.
Black hole mass relations differ between centrals and satellites across multiple properties.
Environmental factors influence black hole growth and galaxy evolution models.
Abstract
We investigate how the scaling relations between central black hole mass (Mbh) and host galaxy properties (velocity dispersion, bulge stellar mass and bulge luminosity) depend on the large scale environment. For each of a sample of 69 galaxies with dynamical black hole measurements we compile four environmental measures (nearest neighbor distance, fixed aperture number density, total halo mass, and central/satellite). We find that central and satellite galaxies follow distinctly separate scalings in each of the three relations we have examined. The Mbh - sigma relation of central galaxies is significantly steeper (6.38 +/- 0.49) than that of satellite galaxies (4.91 +/- 0.49), but has a similar intercept. This behavior remains even after restricting to a sample of only early type galaxies or after removing the 8 brightest cluster galaxies. The Mbh - sigma relation shows more modest…
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