Intermediate-mass black holes in dwarf galaxies out to redshift $\sim$ 2.4 in the Chandra COSMOS Legacy Survey
M. Mezcua, F. Civano, S. Marchesi, H. Suh, G. Fabbiano, M. Volonteri

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes 40 active galactic nuclei in dwarf galaxies up to redshift 2.4, revealing the presence of intermediate-mass black holes and their evolution, which informs theories of black hole seed formation.
Contribution
First detection of AGN in dwarf galaxies at redshift 2.4, demonstrating the existence of intermediate-mass black holes and analyzing their evolution across cosmic time.
Findings
40 AGN in dwarf galaxies up to z=2.4 identified
AGN fraction decreases with redshift, stellar mass, and luminosity
Evidence supporting direct collapse as seed black hole formation mechanism
Abstract
We present a sample of 40 AGN in dwarf galaxies at redshifts 2.4. The galaxies are drawn from the \textit{Chandra} COSMOS-Legacy survey as having stellar masses M. Most of the dwarf galaxies are star-forming. After removing the contribution from star formation to the X-ray emission, the AGN luminosities of the 40 dwarf galaxies are in the range erg s. With 12 sources at , our sample constitutes the highest-redshift discovery of AGN in dwarf galaxies. The record-holder is cid\_1192, at and with erg s. One of the dwarf galaxies has M and is the least massive galaxy found so far to host an AGN. All the AGN are of type 2 and consistent with hosting intermediate-mass black…
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