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The Hunt for Intermediate Mass Black Holes in the JWST Era

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 Added by Jenna Cann
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs), with masses between 100 to 10^5 M_odot, represent the link between stellar mass black holes and the supermassive black holes that reside in galaxy centers. While IMBHs are crucial to our understanding of black hole seed formation, black holes of less than approx 10^4 M_odot eluded detection by traditional searches. Observations of the infrared coronal lines (CLs) offer us one of the most promising tools to discover IMBHs in galaxies. We have modeled the infrared emission line spectrum that is produced by gas photoionized by an AGN radiation field and explored for the first time the dependence of the infrared CL spectrum on black hole mass over the range of 10^2 M_odot to 10^8 M_odot. We show that infrared CLs are expected to be prominent in the spectra of accreting IMBHs and can potentially be a powerful probe of the black hole mass in AGNs. We identify key emission line ratios in the 1-30 mu m range that are most sensitive to black hole mass. While variations in accretion rate and the physical parameters of the gas can also affect the CL spectrum, we demonstrate that the effect of black hole mass is likely to be the most dramatic over the mass range explored in our models. With the unprecedented sensitivity of JWST, a large number of CLs will be detectable for the first time, providing important insight into the existence and properties of IMBHs in the local universe, potentially revolutionizing our understanding of this class of object.



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163 - Julio Chaname 2009
Establishing or ruling out, either through solid mass measurements or upper limits, the presence of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) at the centers of star clusters would profoundly impact our understanding of problems ranging from the formation and long-term dynamical evolution of stellar systems, to the nature of the seeds and the growth mechanisms of supermassive black holes. While there are sound theoretical arguments both for and against their presence in todays clusters, observational studies have so far not yielded truly conclusive IMBH detections nor upper limits. We argue that the most promising approach to solving this issue is provided by the combination of measurements of the proper motions of stars at the centers of Galactic globular clusters and dynamical models able to take full advantage of this type of data set. We present a program based on HST observations and recently developed tools for dynamical analysis designed to do just that.
We describe ongoing searches for intermediate-mass black holes with M_BH ~ 100-10^5 M_sun. We review a range of search mechanisms, both dynamical and those that rely on accretion signatures. We find that dynamical and accretion signatures alike point to a high fraction of 10^9-10^10 M_sun galaxies hosting black holes with M_BH<10^5 M_sun. In contrast, there are no solid detections of black holes in globular clusters. There are few observational constraints on black holes in any environment with M_BH ~ 100-10^4 M_sun. Considering low-mass galaxies with dynamical black hole masses and constraining limits, we find that the M_BH-sigma_* relation continues unbroken to M_BH~10^5 M_sun, albeit with large scatter. We believe the scatter is at least partially driven by a broad range in black hole mass, since the occupation fraction appears to be relatively high in these galaxies. We fold the observed scaling relations with our empirical limits on occupation fraction and the galaxy mass function to put observational bounds on the black hole mass function in galaxy nuclei. We are pessimistic that local demographic observations of galaxy nuclei alone could constrain seeding mechanisms, although either high-redshift luminosity functions or robust measurements of off-nuclear black holes could begin to discriminate models.
Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) could form via runaway merging of massive stars in a young massive star cluster (YMC). We combine a suite of numerical simulations of YMC formation with a semi-analytic model for dynamical friction and merging of massive stars and evolution of a central quasi-star, to predict how final quasi-star and relic IMBH masses scale with cluster properties (and compare with observations). The simulations argue that inner YMC density profiles at formation are steep (approaching isothermal), producing some efficient merging even in clusters with relatively low effective densities, unlike models which assume flat central profiles resembling those of globular clusters (GCs) {em after} central relaxation. Our results can be approximated by simple analytic scalings, with $M_{rm IMBH} propto v_{rm cl}^{3/2}$ where $v_{rm cl}^{2} = G,M_{rm cl}/r_{rm h}$ is the circular velocity in terms of initial cluster mass $M_{rm cl}$ and half-mass radius $r_{rm h}$. While this suggests IMBH formation is {em possible} even in typical clusters, we show that predicted IMBH masses for these systems are small, $sim 100-1000,M_{odot}$ or $sim 0.0003,M_{rm cl}$, below even the most conservative observational upper limits in all known cases. The IMBH mass could reach $gtrsim 10^{4},M_{odot}$ in the centers nuclear star clusters, ultra-compact dwarfs, or compact ellipticals, but in all these cases the prediction remains far below the present observed supermassive BH masses in these systems.
Intermediate-mass black holes are theoretically predicted but observationally elusive, and evidence for them is often indirect. The nearby face-on spiral galaxy NGC3310 has hosted many supernovae in recent history, and recent Chandra observations have shown a group of strong off-nuclear X-ray sources that are coincident with radio emission seen in archival VLA and MERLIN observations. Their luminosity, spectrum and off-nuclear location make these sources excellent IMBH candidates. To investigate this possibility, we used combined EVN/e-MERLIN observations at both 1.4 and 5 GHz to look for compact radio emission and evidence of jet activity. We detect a compact radio source within one arcsecond of a Chandra source with an estimated mass ${rm M}_{rm BH}sim3times10^4 {rm M}_{odot}$.
63 - Mar Mezcua 2017
Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs), with masses in the range $100-10^{6}$ M$_{odot}$, are the link between stellar-mass BHs and supermassive BHs (SMBHs). They are thought to be the seeds from which SMBHs grow, which would explain the existence of quasars with BH masses of up to 10$^{10}$ M$_{odot}$ when the Universe was only 0.8 Gyr old. The detection and study of IMBHs has thus strong implications for understanding how SMBHs form and grow, which is ultimately linked to galaxy formation and growth, as well as for studies of the universality of BH accretion or the epoch of reionisation. Proving the existence of seed BHs in the early Universe is not yet feasible with the current instrumentation; however, those seeds that did not grow into SMBHs can be found as IMBHs in the nearby Universe. In this review I summarize the different scenarios proposed for the formation of IMBHs and gather all the observational evidence for the few hundreds of nearby IMBH candidates found in dwarf galaxies, globular clusters, and ultraluminous X-ray sources, as well as the possible discovery of a few seed BHs at high redshift. I discuss some of their properties, such as X-ray weakness and location in the BH mass scaling relations, and the possibility to discover IMBHs through high velocity clouds, tidal disruption events, gravitational waves, or accretion disks in active galactic nuclei. I finalize with the prospects for the detection of IMBHs with up-coming observatories.
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