The Black Hole Mass Function Derived from Local Spiral Galaxies
Benjamin L. Davis, Joel C. Berrier, Lucas Johns, Douglas W. Shields,, Matthew T. Hartley, Daniel Kennefick, Julia Kennefick, Marc S. Seigar, and, Claud H. S. Lacy

TL;DR
This study estimates the supermassive black hole mass function in local spiral galaxies, providing insights into SMBH distribution and evolution, especially at the low-mass end, using pitch angle measurements and a volume-limited sample.
Contribution
It introduces a new SMBH mass function for spiral galaxies based on pitch angle relations, addressing low-mass end inconsistencies and improving understanding of SMBH evolution.
Findings
High-mass end SMBH mass function aligns with previous studies.
Low-mass end results are consistent with SMBH evolution models.
Estimated SMBH density in local spiral galaxies is approximately 5.54×10^4 h_{67.77}^3 M_sun Mpc^{-3}.
Abstract
We present our determination of the nuclear supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass function for spiral galaxies in the Local Universe, established from a volume-limited sample consisting of a statistically complete collection of the brightest spiral galaxies in the Southern Hemisphere. Our SMBH mass function agrees well at the high-mass end with previous values given in the literature. At the low-mass end, inconsistencies exist in previous works that still need to be resolved, but our work is more in line with expectations based on modeling of SMBH evolution. This low-mass end of the spectrum is critical to our understanding of the mass function and evolution of SMBHs since the epoch of maximum quasar activity. A luminosity distance 25.4 and an absolute B-band magnitude -19.12 define the sample. These limits define a sample of 140 spiral galaxies, with 128 measurable…
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