Do the Most Massive Black Holes at $z=2$ Grow via Major Mergers?
M. Mechtley, K. Jahnke, R. A. Windhorst, R. Andrae, M. Cisternas, S., H. Cohen, T. Hewlett, A. M. Koekemoer, M. Schramm, A. Schulze, J. D., Silverman, C. Villforth, A. van der Wel, L. Wisotzki

TL;DR
This study investigates whether major galaxy mergers are the main trigger for the growth of the most massive black holes at redshift 2, finding no significant evidence supporting mergers as the primary mechanism.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical test of the merger hypothesis for high-mass $z=2$ quasars using HST imaging and expert ranking, challenging the merger-driven growth model.
Findings
No significant difference in merger signatures between quasar hosts and inactive galaxies.
Distortion fractions are similar for quasar hosts (39%) and inactive galaxies (30%).
Major mergers are unlikely to be the dominant growth mechanism for these massive black holes.
Abstract
The most frequently proposed model for the origin of quasars holds that the high accretion rates seen in luminous active galactic nuclei are primarily triggered during major mergers between gas-rich galaxies. While plausible for decades, this model has only begun to be tested with statistical rigor in the past few years. Here we report on a Hubble Space Telescope study to test this hypothesis for quasars with high super-massive black hole masses (), which dominate cosmic black hole growth at this redshift. We compare Wide Field Camera 3 (rest-frame -band) imaging of 19 point source-subtracted quasar hosts to a matched sample of 84 inactive galaxies, testing whether the quasar hosts have greater evidence for strong gravitational interactions. Using an expert ranking procedure, we find that the quasar hosts are uniformly distributed…
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