AGN Black hole mass estimates using polarization in broad emission Lines
{\DJ}. Savi\'c (1, 2), R. Goosmann (1), L. \v{C}. Popovi\'c (2 and, 3), F. Marin (1), V. L. Afanasiev (4) ((1) Observatoire Astronomique de, Strasbourg, Universit\'e de Strasbourg, (2) Astronomical Observatory, Belgrade, (3) Department of Astronomy, Faculty of Mathematics

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that spectropolarimetric modeling can effectively estimate supermassive black hole masses in Type-1 AGNs by analyzing polarization in broad emission lines, considering various geometries and dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical framework and modeling approach to improve SMBH mass estimates using polarization, accounting for BLR and scattering region geometries and motions.
Findings
Method is effective for inclinations 25-45 degrees.
Optimal SMBH mass estimates occur when scattering region is 1.5-2.5 times the BLR radius.
Applicable to AGNs with inflows/outflows less than 500 km/s.
Abstract
The innermost regions in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) were not being spatially resolved so far but spectropolarimetry can provide us insight about their hidden physics and the geometry. From spectropolarimetric observations in broad emission lines and assuming equatorial scattering as a dominant polarization mechanism, it is possible to estimate the mass of supermassive black holes (SMBHs). We explore the possibilities and limits and to put constraints on the usage of the method for determining SMBH masses using polarization in broad emission lines by providing more in-depth theoretical modeling. Methods. We use the Monte Carlo radiative transfer code STOKES for exploring polarization of Type 1 AGNs. We model equatorial scattering using flared-disk geometry for a set of different SMBH masses assuming Thomson scattering. In addition to the Keplerian motion in the BLR, we also consider…
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