Résumé / Abstract Journal-club_Galaxies

Séminaire/Seminar Galaxies

« TRINITY I: Self-consistently modeling the dark matter halo–galaxy–supermassive black hole connection from z = 0 to 10 »

Haowen Zhang
Department of Astronomy and Steward Observatory, the University of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona, Etats-Unis d'Amérique)

We present TRINITY, a flexible empirical model that self-consistently infers the statistical connection between dark matter haloes, galaxies, and supermassive black holes (SMBHs). TRINITY is constrained by galaxy observables from 0 < z < 10 (galaxies’ stellar mass functions, specific and cosmic SFRs, quenched fractions, and UV luminosity functions) and SMBH observables from 0 < z < 6.5 (quasar luminosity functions, quasar probability distribution functions, active black hole mass functions, local SMBH mass–bulge mass relations, and the observed SMBH mass distributions of high redshift bright quasars). The model includes full treatment of observational systematics (e.g., AGN obscuration and errors in stellar masses). From these data, TRINITY infers the average SMBH mass, SMBH accretion rate, merger rate, and Eddington ratio distribution as functions of halo mass, galaxy stellar mass, and redshift. Key findings include: 1) the normalization and the slope of the SMBH mass–bulge mass relation increases mildly from z = 0 to z = 10; 2) AGNs show downsizing, i.e., the Eddington ratios of more massive SMBHs start to decrease earlier than those of lower-mass objects; 3) Bright quasars with bolometric luminosities above 10^46 erg/s always live in ~10^12 Msun halos from z=0-10
jeudi 22 septembre 2022 - 11:30
Salle du Conseil
Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris
Page web du séminaire / Seminar's webpage