Supermassive black holes and their host spheroids II. The red and blue sequence in the $M_{\rm BH} - M_{\rm *,sph}$ diagram
Giulia A. D. Savorgnan, Alister W. Graham, Alessandro Marconi,, Eleonora Sani

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between supermassive black hole mass and host galaxy properties across different galaxy types, revealing distinct sequences for early and late-type galaxies and refining previous correlations.
Contribution
It provides the largest detailed decomposition of galaxy structures with direct black hole mass measurements, including low-mass spirals, and clarifies the $M_{BH}$–$M_{*,sph}$ relation for diverse galaxy types.
Findings
Early-type galaxy bulges follow a near-linear $M_{BH} \,\propto \, M_{*,sph}^{1.04}$ relation.
Late-type galaxy bulges define a steeper $M_{BH} \,\propto \, M_{*,sph}^{2-3}$ sequence.
Bulges with Sersic index $n<2$ are not offset from the main correlation.
Abstract
In our first paper, we performed a detailed (i.e. bulge, disks, bars, spiral arms, rings, halo, nucleus, etc.) decomposition of 66 galaxies, with directly measured black hole masses, , that had been imaged at with Spitzer. Our sample is the largest to date and, for the first time, the decompositions were checked for consistency with the galaxy kinematics. We present correlations between and the host spheroid (and galaxy) luminosity, (and ), and also stellar mass, . While most previous studies have used galaxy samples that were overwhelmingly dominated by high-mass, early-type galaxies, our sample includes 17 spiral galaxies, half of which have , and allows us to better investigate the poorly studied low-mass end of the correlation. The bulges of early-type galaxies follow $M_{BH}…
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