Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension

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Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension Yue Shen Carnegie Observatories In collaboration with Brandon Kelly (UCSB)

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Yue Shen Carnegie Observatories In collaboration with Brandon Kelly (UCSB). Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension. M otivation. T he abundance (and clustering) of quasars are key to understand the evolution of quasars/SMBHs in the hierarchical structure formation paradigm - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension

Page 1: Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension

Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension

Yue ShenCarnegie ObservatoriesIn collaboration with Brandon Kelly (UCSB)

Page 2: Demographics of SDSS Quasars in Two-Dimension

Motivation

The abundance (and clustering) of quasars are key to understand the evolution of quasars/SMBHs in the hierarchical structure formation paradigm

Abundance measurements form a basis for any cosmological quasar models

Likely tied to formation and evolution of galaxies Key science goal in many current and upcoming

extragalactic survey programs

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Quasar Luminosity Function Evolves strongly with redshift

Richards et al. (2006, SDSS DR3)

The space density of bright quasars peaks around z~2-3

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For bright quasars, the abundance follows a “pure luminosity evolution” (PLE) a fading, long-lived quasar population?

Such a simple picture doesn’t fit other observations.

PLE

SDSS DR7 LF (Shen & Kelly 2012)

Z=

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Quasar clustering measurements suggest low-z quasars are not simply the descendants of high-z quasars

Dashed lines: predicted evolution of the linear bias for a passive population

z~2 quasars should end up in cluster-sized environment at z~0.5

YS, McBride, White, Zheng, et al. (2013)

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Quasars evolve in the mass-luminosity plane

Virial masses

A better representation of the evolution of the quasar population

Contains richer information about the growth of SMBHs

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Estimating quasar BH masses

The broad-line region (BLR) is assumed to be virialized

BLR size (reverberation

mapping)Virial

velocity

Reverberation mapping is time consuming, and we only have BLR size measured this way for ~40 AGNs

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Bentz et al. (2009)

b~0.5, Consistent with naive predictions of photoionization models

Reverberation mapping R~Lb (Kaspi et al. 2000)

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Single-epoch virial BH mass estimators

Vestergaard & Peterson(2006), McLure & Dunlop (2004), Greene et al. (2005), and many more …

Currently the only practical method to estimate BH mass for large spectroscopic quasar samples

Many physical and practical concerns that need to be addressed (Shen 2013): we are extrapolating from ~40 local AGNs with reverberation mapping data to high-z, high-luminosity quasars

Large uncertainties for individual BH mass estimates: ~ a factor of 3 (~0.5 dex)

Continuum luminosity

Broad line width

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Quasar abundance in the mass-luminosity plane

Two major problems: 1. Flux limit of the

sample2. Scatter in BH mass

due to errors in mass estimates

Virial masses

The sample used: ~58,000 uniformly selected DR7 SDSS quasars, with good spectra to estimate BH mass

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Forward modeling in the mass-luminosity plane (Shen & Kelly 2012, Kelly & Shen 2013)

True BH masses

Flux limit and mass errors are more easily accounted for

More information is preserved

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Caveats: SDSS only probes the tip of the quasar population, poorly constraining the faint-

end of the LF and the low-mass end of the BHMF – need deeper data Systematic uncertainties of quasar BH mass estimates have dramatic effects on

the BHMF estimates – need to improve the BH weighing method

LF BHMF

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Downsizing in terms of quasar luminosity and BH mass

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Properly accounting for the selection effect of flux-limited samples and errors in the virial BH mass estimates

Flux limit

Red: true massBlack: virial mass estimates

Eddington limit Interpret the

“observed distributions” with caution

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Summary Instead of measuring LF and BHMF separately,

measure 2D density in the M-L plane (if you have a spectroscopic sample); this gives you more information on the evolution of the quasar population

Forward modeling in the M-L plane makes it easier to account for the sample flux-limit and errors in mass estimates

The “observed” distribution in the M-L plane is biased; don’t interpret it directly!

There is urgent need to improve quasar BH mass weighing methods (~0.5 dex error is inconvenient)