The Drivers of the Decline in Supermassive Black Hole Growth at z < 2
ORAL
Abstract
It is well established that cosmic supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth peaks at z ≈ 1.5 − 2, followed by a strong decline of ≈ 1 − 1.5 dex toward the present day, with the comoving number density of higher-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGNs) peaking at higher redshift (referred to as “AGN downsizing”). We leverage the best current measurements of the SMBH accretion distribution, based upon data from nine well-characterized extragalactic fields with a “wedding-cake” design, to investigate and quantify the drivers of the drastic decline in cosmic SMBH growth. The decline in the typical Eddington ratio (λEdd) of AGNs (decreasing by ≈ 1.35 dex from z ≈ 1.5 − 2 to z ≈ 0.2) is the dominant driver for the broad decline in SMBH growth, rather than a shift of accretion activity to less-massive SMBHs. As λEdd decreases toward lower redshift, the primary contributor to the cosmic SMBH accretion density (ρBHAR) has shifted from high-λEdd AGNs to low-λEdd AGNs, even though the latter always dominate the comoving AGN number density at z < 4. We also find that the decline in SMBH growth toward lower SMBH mass in less-massive galaxies is primarily due to the decreasing outburst luminosity rather than the duty cycle.
*ZY and WNB acknowledge support from NSF grants AST-21606990 and AST-2407089 and Chandra X-ray Center Grant AR4-25008X. FV acknowledges support from "INAF Ricerca Fondamentale 2023 - Large GO" grant.
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Publication: Submitted to ApJ
Presenters
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Zhibo Yu
- Pennsylvania State University