Differential interferometry of QSO broad line regions I: improving the reverberation mapping model fits and black hole mass estimates
Suvendu Rakshit, Romain G. Petrov, Anthony Meilland, Sebastian F., H\"onig

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how differential interferometry can improve the measurement of broad line region structures and black hole masses in quasars, surpassing traditional reverberation mapping accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a 3D BLR model combined with differential interferometry signals and noise analysis, significantly enhancing black hole mass estimates over existing methods.
Findings
Mass measurement accuracy improved to 0.06-0.13 dex
Over 60 BLRs can be resolved with current VLTI technology
Potential for better calibration of RM mass-luminosity relations
Abstract
Reverberation mapping estimates the size and kinematics of broad line regions (BLR) in Quasars and type I AGNs. It yields size-luminosity relation, to make QSOs standard cosmological candles, and mass-luminosity relation to study the evolution of black holes and galaxies. The accuracy of these relations is limited by the unknown geometry of the BLR clouds distribution and velocities. We analyze the independent BLR structure constraints given by super-resolving differential interferometry. We developed a three-dimensional BLR model to compute all differential interferometry and reverberation mapping signals. We extrapolate realistic noises from our successful observations of the QSO 3C273 with AMBER on the VLTI. These signals and noises quantify the differential interferometry capacity to discriminate and measure BLR parameters including angular size, thickness, spatial distribution of…
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.
