Normal black holes in bulge-less galaxies: the largely quiescent, merger-free growth of black holes over cosmic time
G. Martin (1), S. Kaviraj (1), M. Volonteri (2), B. D. Simmons (3), J., E. G. Devriendt (4), C. J. Lintott (4), R. J. Smethurst (5), Y. Dubois (2), and C. Pichon (2) ((1) University of Hertfordshire, (2) Institut, d'Astrophysique de Paris, (3) University of California

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that black holes in bulge-less galaxies grow mainly through secular processes rather than mergers, aligning with observed relations across galaxy types.
Contribution
It demonstrates that most black hole growth occurs gradually via secular processes, challenging the merger-driven paradigm and using simulations to support observational findings.
Findings
Bulge-less galaxies lie on the $M_{BH}$--$M_{*}$ relation.
Black hole growth is mostly secular, not merger-driven.
Approximately 65% of black hole mass growth occurs gradually over cosmic time.
Abstract
Understanding the processes that drive the formation of black holes (BHs) is a key topic in observational cosmology. While the observed -- correlation in bulge-dominated galaxies is thought to be produced by major mergers, the existence of a -- relation, across all galaxy morphological types, suggests that BHs may be largely built by secular processes. Recent evidence that bulge-less galaxies, which are unlikely to have had significant mergers, are offset from the -- relation, but lie on the -- relation, has strengthened this hypothesis. Nevertheless, the small size and heterogeneity of current datasets, coupled with the difficulty in measuring precise BH masses, makes it challenging to address this issue using empirical studies alone. Here, we use…
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