Intermediate-Mass Black Holes
Jenny E. Greene, Jay Strader, Luis C. Ho

TL;DR
This paper reviews methods and findings related to the search for intermediate-mass black holes, highlighting the current observational constraints, scaling relations, and challenges in understanding their demographics and formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of search techniques, observational constraints, and the implications for black hole demographics and formation models in the intermediate-mass range.
Findings
High fraction of small black holes in massive galaxies
No confirmed black holes in globular clusters
The M_BH-sigma_* relation extends to ~10^5 M_sun
Abstract
We describe ongoing searches for intermediate-mass black holes with M_BH ~ 100-10^5 M_sun. We review a range of search mechanisms, both dynamical and those that rely on accretion signatures. We find that dynamical and accretion signatures alike point to a high fraction of 10^9-10^10 M_sun galaxies hosting black holes with M_BH<10^5 M_sun. In contrast, there are no solid detections of black holes in globular clusters. There are few observational constraints on black holes in any environment with M_BH ~ 100-10^4 M_sun. Considering low-mass galaxies with dynamical black hole masses and constraining limits, we find that the M_BH-sigma_* relation continues unbroken to M_BH~10^5 M_sun, albeit with large scatter. We believe the scatter is at least partially driven by a broad range in black hole mass, since the occupation fraction appears to be relatively high in these galaxies. We fold the…
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