The mass relations between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies at 1<z<2 with HST-WFC3
Xuheng Ding, John Silverman, Tommaso Treu, Andreas Schulze, Malte, Schramm, Simon Birrer, Daeseong Park, Knud Jahnke, Vardha N. Bennert, Jeyhan, S. Kartaltepe, Anton M. Koekemoer, Matthew A. Malkan, David Sanders

TL;DR
This study measures the relationship between supermassive black hole mass and host galaxy properties at redshifts 1<z<2, finding a higher black hole to galaxy mass ratio than locally, suggesting different growth rates over cosmic time.
Contribution
First measurement of SMBH-host galaxy relations at 1<z<2 using HST imaging and near-infrared spectroscopy, providing insights into co-evolution scenarios.
Findings
MBH/M* ratio is 2.7 times larger at z~1.5 than locally
Scatter in the relations is similar across epochs
Results are consistent with SMBHs growing faster than their host galaxies
Abstract
Correlations between the mass of a supermassive black hole and the properties of its host galaxy (e.g., total stellar mass (M*), luminosity (Lhost)) suggest an evolutionary connection. A powerful test of a co-evolution scenario is to measure the relations MBH-Lhost and MBH-M* at high redshift and compare with local estimates. For this purpose, we acquired HST imaging with WFC3 of 32 X-ray-selected broad-line AGN at 1.2<z<1.7 in deep survey fields. By applying state-of-the-art tools to decompose the HST images including available ACS data, we measured the host galaxy luminosity and stellar mass along with other properties through the 2D model fitting. The black hole mass was determined using the broad Halpha line, detected in the near-infrared with Subaru/FMOS, which potentially minimizes systematic effects using other indicators. We find that the observed ratio of MBH to total M* is 2.7…
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