The Hunt for Intermediate Mass Black Holes in the JWST Era
Jenna M. Cann, Shobita Satyapal, Nicholas P. Abel, Claudio Ricci,, Nathan J. Secrest, Laura Blecha, Mario Gliozzi

TL;DR
This paper models infrared emission lines to identify and measure intermediate mass black holes in galaxies, proposing a new method that leverages JWST's sensitivity to detect these elusive objects.
Contribution
It introduces the first detailed modeling of infrared coronal lines as a tool to determine black hole mass in AGNs, focusing on the intermediate mass range.
Findings
Infrared coronal lines are prominent in spectra of accreting IMBHs.
Key emission line ratios are identified as most sensitive to black hole mass.
Black hole mass has a dominant effect on the CL spectrum over other parameters.
Abstract
Intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs), with masses between 100 to 10^5 M_\odot, represent the link between stellar mass black holes and the supermassive black holes that reside in galaxy centers. While IMBHs are crucial to our understanding of black hole seed formation, black holes of less than \approx 10^4 M_\odot eluded detection by traditional searches. Observations of the infrared coronal lines (CLs) offer us one of the most promising tools to discover IMBHs in galaxies. We have modeled the infrared emission line spectrum that is produced by gas photoionized by an AGN radiation field and explored for the first time the dependence of the infrared CL spectrum on black hole mass over the range of 10^2 M_\odot to 10^8 M_\odot. We show that infrared CLs are expected to be prominent in the spectra of accreting IMBHs and can potentially be a powerful probe of the black hole mass in AGNs.…
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