Supermassive Black Holes with High Accretion Rates in Active Galactic Nuclei. V. A New Size-Luminosity Scaling Relation for the Broad-Line Region
Pu Du, Kai-Xing Lu, Zhi-Xiang Zhang, Ying-Ke Huang, Kai Wang, Chen Hu,, Jie Qiu, Yan-Rong Li, Xu-Liang Fan, Xiang-Er Fang, Jin-Ming Bai, Wei-Hao, Bian, Ye-Fei Yuan, Luis C. Ho, Jian-Min Wang (SEAMBH collaboration)

TL;DR
This study introduces a new size-luminosity scaling relation for the broad-line region in active galactic nuclei, accounting for high accretion rates, and demonstrates its applicability across a wide range of AGN luminosities and accretion rates.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel scaling relation for the broad-line region size that incorporates accretion rate effects, improving upon the traditional $R_{_{Heta}}-L_{5100}$ relation.
Findings
H$eta$ lags are shorter in high accretion rate quasars.
The reduction of H$eta$ lag depends on accretion rate as $ au_{_{Heta}}/ au_{_{R-L}}\, ext{propto}\, ext{ extonehalf}^{-0.42}$.
A new universal scaling relation for the broad-line region size is proposed.
Abstract
This paper reports results of the third-year campaign of monitoring super-Eddington accreting massive black holes (SEAMBHs) in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) between 2014-2015. Ten new targets were selected from quasar sample of Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), which are generally more luminous than the SEAMBH candidates in last two years. H lags () in five of the 10 quasars have been successfully measured in this monitoring season. We find that the lags are generally shorter, by large factors, than those of objects with same optical luminosity, in light of the well-known relation. The five quasars have dimensionless accretion rates of . Combining measurements of the previous SEAMBHs, we find that the reduction of H lags tightly depends on accretion rates, $\tau_{_{\rm…
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.
