Black hole mass, host galaxy mass, and dark matter halos: Testing the environmental connection
G. Mountrichas, F. Shankar, F. J. Carrera, A. Georgakakis

TL;DR
This study explores the relationship between supermassive black holes, their host galaxies, and dark matter halos, revealing potential environmental influences at higher black hole masses through cross-correlation analysis.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how black hole mass correlates with large-scale dark matter halo properties, especially at the higher mass end, using extensive survey data.
Findings
Black hole mass correlates with host galaxy properties but with significant scatter.
AGN in higher mass black holes may reside in more massive halos, suggesting environmental effects.
No significant halo mass difference for lower mass black hole AGN compared to controls.
Abstract
We investigate the connection between supermassive black holes (SMBHs), their host galaxies, and large-scale dark-matter halos using broad-line X-ray AGN from the XMM--XXL and Stripe\,82X surveys, together with galaxies from VIPERS and SDSS/Stripe\,82. Building on the homogeneous host-galaxy catalogue presented in Paper~I, we test whether AGN with a given black-hole mass, , inhabit different large-scale environments from non-AGN galaxies with similar host properties. We first examine the empirical -- relation of the AGN sample. We find a shallow trend with substantial scatter, likely driven by flux-limited selection effects and uncertainties in virial black-hole mass estimates. The ratio decreases with increasing stellar mass, and AGN lying above and below the empirical relation show different median host properties, consistent…
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