Too many or too massive? Investigating the high-$z$ demography of active SMBHs from JWST
Daniel Roberts, Francesco Shankar, Vieri Cammelli, Fabio Fontanot, Alessandro Trinca, Laura Bisigello, Elena Dalla Bonta, Hao Fu, Roberto Gilli, Andrea Grazian, Luca Graziani, Andrea Lapi, Nicola Menci, Jan Scholtz, Karthik Mahesh Varadarajan

TL;DR
This study uses JWST data and a data-driven model to explore the growth and demographics of supermassive black holes at high redshift, finding moderate black hole-galaxy relations and duty cycles consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a framework linking galaxy and black hole populations with different scaling relations and duty cycles, reconciling JWST observations with SMBH evolution models.
Findings
Moderate $M_{\rm BH}-M_{*}$ relations fit observed AGN luminosity functions.
High $M_{\rm BH}-M_{*}$ relations require low duty cycles to match data.
Moderate relations produce SMBH mass functions consistent with current estimates.
Abstract
Recent JWST observations have unveiled a numerous population of low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGN) at , with space densities roughly an order of magnitude above pre-JWST estimates, and many of these AGN have masses orders of magnitude above the local black hole mass-stellar mass () scaling relations. We investigate the consistency of these observations within a data-driven framework that links the galaxy stellar mass function to the supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass function and AGN luminosity functions using different relations and the observed Eddington-ratio distribution. By comparing our predictions against observed AGN luminosity functions at we find that observations can be reproduced either by highly-elevated relations paired with low duty cycles, or moderate relations with higher duty cycles.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
