Revealing the relation between black-hole growth and host-galaxy compactness among star-forming galaxies
Q. Ni, W. N. Brandt, G. Yang, J. Leja, C.-T. J. Chen, B. Luo, J., Matharu, M. Sun, F. Vito, Y. Q. Xue, and K. Zhang

TL;DR
This study reveals that black-hole growth in star-forming galaxies is more strongly linked to the central compactness of the host galaxy, measured by surface-mass density, than to stellar mass or star formation rate.
Contribution
It demonstrates a stronger correlation between black-hole accretion rate and galaxy compactness than with traditional galaxy properties, highlighting the importance of central density in BH-galaxy co-evolution.
Findings
Black-hole accretion rate correlates more strongly with central surface-mass density than with stellar mass or SFR.
The $ m ar{BHAR}$-$ m abla_{1}$ relation applies across different galaxy morphologies.
Central gas density and potential well influence black-hole growth in star-forming galaxies.
Abstract
Recent studies show that a universal relation between black-hole (BH) growth and stellar mass () or star formation rate (SFR) is an oversimplification of BH-galaxy co-evolution, and that morphological and structural properties of host galaxies must also be considered. Particularly, a possible connection between BH growth and host-galaxy compactness was identified among star-forming (SF) galaxies. Utilizing massive galaxies with at 1.2 in the COSMOS field, we perform systematic partial-correlation analyses to investigate how sample-averaged BH accretion rate () depends on host-galaxy compactness among SF galaxies, when controlling for morphology and (or SFR). The projected central surface-mass density within 1 kpc, , is utilized to represent host-galaxy compactness in our study. We find…
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