Causal Reversal in the $M_\unicode{x25CF}\unicode{x2013}\sigma_0$ Relation: Implications for High-Redshift Supermassive Black Hole Mass Estimates
Benjamin L. Davis, Saakshi More, Zehao Jin, Mario Pasquato, Andrea Valerio Macci\`o, and Feng Yuan

TL;DR
This paper uses galaxy simulations to study the causal relationship between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies, revealing a causal reversal over cosmic time that impacts high-redshift black hole mass estimates.
Contribution
It demonstrates the causal reversal in SMBH-galaxy relations through simulations and proposes revised scaling relations for high-redshift SMBH mass estimation.
Findings
Causal direction between SMBHs and galaxies reverses before and after star formation peak.
Simulations reproduce observed causal patterns in real galaxies.
Updated scaling relations suggest lower SMBH masses at high redshift.
Abstract
The nascent methodology of applying the principles of causal discovery to astrophysical data has produced affirming results about deeply held theories concerning the causal nature behind the observed coevolution of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) with their host galaxies. The key results from observations have demonstrated an apparent causal reversal across different galaxy morphologiesSMBHs causally influence the evolution of the physical parameters of their spiral galaxy hosts, whereas SMBHs in elliptical galaxies are passive companions that grow in near lockstep with their hosts. To further explore and ascertain insights, it is necessary to utilize galaxy simulations to track the time evolution of the observed causal relations to learn more about the temporal nature of the changing SMBH/galaxy evolutionary directions. We conducted experiments with the NIHAO suite of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
