Do current X-ray observations capture most of the black-hole accretion at high redshifts?
Guang Yang (TAMU), Vicente Estrada-Carpenter, Casey Papovich, Fabio, Vito, Jonelle L. Walsh, Zhiyuan Yao, Feng Yuan

TL;DR
This study estimates the black hole accretion density at high redshifts using star formation histories, revealing it is higher than X-ray observations suggest, implying many obscured AGNs are missed in current surveys.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to estimate high-redshift black hole accretion density from star formation histories of bulge-dominated galaxies, bypassing direct X-ray detection limitations.
Findings
Predicted BHAD at z≈4-5 aligns with simulations.
X-ray measurements underestimate BHAD by 3-10 times.
Heavily obscured Compton-thick AGNs likely missed in surveys.
Abstract
The cosmic black hole accretion density (BHAD) is critical for our understanding of the formation and evolution of supermassive black holes (BHs). However, at high redshifts (), X-ray observations report BHADs significantly ( times) lower than those predicted by cosmological simulations. It is therefore paramount to constrain the high- BHAD using independent methods other than direct X-ray detections. The recently established relation between star formation rate and BH accretion rate among bulge-dominated galaxies provides such a chance, as it enables an estimate of the BHAD from the star-formation histories (SFHs) of lower-redshift objects. Using the CANDELS Lyman- Emission At Reionization (CLEAR) survey, we model the SFHs for a sample of 108 bulge-dominated galaxies at 0.7-1.5, and further estimate the BHAD contributed by their high- progenitors. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Statistics Education and Methodologies
