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Using a compiled sample of 34 broad-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) with measured H$beta$ time lags from the reverberation mapping (RM) method and measured bulge stellar velocity dispersions $sigma_*$, we calculate the virial factor $f$ by assuming that the RM AGNs intrinsically obey the same $M_{rm BH}-sigma_*$ relation as quiescent galaxies, where $M_{rm BH}$ is the mass of the supermassive black hole (SMBH). Considering four tracers of the velocity of the broad-line regions (BLRs), i.e., the H$beta$ line width or line dispersion from the mean or rms spectrum, there are four kinds of the factor $f$. Using the hb Full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) to trace the BLRs velocity, we find significant correlations between the factor $f$ and some observational parameters, e.g., FWHM, the line dispersion. Using the line dispersion to trace the BLRs velocity, these relations disappear or become weaker. It implies the effect of inclination in BLRs geometry. It also suggests that the variable $f$ in $M_{rm BH}$ estimated from luminosity and FWHM in a single-epoch spectrum is not negligible. Using a simple model of thick-disk BLRs, we also find that, as the tracer of the BLRs velocity, H$beta$ FWHM has some dependence on the inclination, while the line dispersion $sigma_{rm Hbeta }$ is insensitive to the inclination. Considering the calibrated FWHM-based factor $f$ from the mean spectrum, the scatter of the SMBH mass is 0.39 dex for our sample of 34 low redshift RM AGNs. For a high redshift sample of 30 SDSS RM AGNs with measured stellar velocity dispersions, we find that the SMBH mass scatter is larger than that for our sample of 34 low redshift RM AGNs. It implies the possibility of evolution of the $M_{rm BH}-sigma_*$ relation from high-redshift to low-redshift AGNs.
Using different kinds of velocity tracers derived from the broad H$beta$ profile (in the mean or rms spectrum) and the corresponding virial factors $f$, the central supermassive black hole (SMBH) masses ($M_{rm BH}$) are calculated for a compiled sam
X-ray reverberation mapping has emerged as a powerful probe of microparsec scales around AGN, and with high sensitivity detectors, its full potential in echo-mapping the otherwise inaccessible disk-corona at the black hole horizon scale will be revealed.
Based on the gravitational redshift, one prediction of Einsteins general relativity theory, of broad optical emission lines in active galactic nuclei (AGNs), a new method is proposed to estimate the virial factors $f$ in measuring black hole masses $
For a compiled sample of 120 reverberation-mapped AGNs, the bivariate correlations of the broad-line regions (BLRs) size ($R_{rm BLR}$) with the continuum luminosity at 5100 AA ($L_{5100}$) and the dimensionless accretion rates ($dot{mathscr{M}}$) ar
Megamaser disks provide the most precise and accurate extragalactic supermassive black hole masses. Here we describe a search for megamasers in nearby galaxies using the Green Bank Telescope (GBT). We focus on galaxies where we believe that we can re