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The $M_{\rm BH}-M_*$ relation up to $z\sim2$ through decomposition of COSMOS-Web NIRCam images

Authors :
Tanaka, Takumi S.
Silverman, John D.
Ding, Xuheng
Jahnke, Knud
Trakhtenbrot, Benny
Lambrides, Erini
Onoue, Masafusa
Andika, Irham Taufik
Bongiorno, Angela
Faisst, Andreas L.
Gillman, Steven
Hayward, Christopher C.
Hirschmann, Michaela
Koekemoer, Anton
Kokorev, Vasily
Liu, Zhaoxuan
Magdis, Georgios E.
Renzini, Alvio
Casey, Caitlin
Drakos, Nicole E.
Franco, Maximilien
Gozaliasl, Ghassem
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan
Liu, Daizhong
McCracken, Henry Joy
Rhodes, Jason
Robertson, Brant
Toft, Sune
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Our knowledge of relations between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies at $z\gtrsim1$ is still limited, even though being actively sought out to $z\sim6$. Here, we use the high resolution and sensitivity of JWST to measure the host galaxy properties for 107 X-ray-selected type-I AGNs at $0.68<z<2.5$ with rest-frame optical/near-infrared imaging from COSMOS-Web and PRIMER. Black hole masses ($\log\left(M_{\rm BH}/M_\odot\right)\sim6.9-9.6$) are available from previous spectroscopic campaigns. We extract the host galaxy components from four NIRCam broadband images and the HST/ACS F814W image by applying a 2D image decomposition technique. We detect the host galaxy for $\sim90\%$ of the sample after subtracting the unresolved AGN emission. With host photometry free of AGN emission, we determine the stellar mass of the host galaxies to be $\log\left(M_*/M_\odot\right)\sim9.5-11.6$ through SED fitting and measure the evolution of the mass relation between SMBHs and their host galaxies. Considering selection biases and measurement uncertainties, we find that the $M_\mathrm{ BH}/M_*$ ratio evolves as $\left(1+z\right)^{0.48_{-0.62}^{+0.31}}$ thus remains essentially constant or exhibits mild evolution up to $z\sim2.5$. We also see an amount of scatter ($\sigma_{\mu}=0.30^{+0.14}_{-0.13}$), similar to the local relation and consistent with low-$z$ studies, and a non-causal cosmic assembly history where mergers contribute to the statistical averaging towards the local relation is still feasible. We highlight improvements to come with larger samples from JWST and, particularly, Euclid, which will exceed the statistical power of current wide and deep surveys.<br />Comment: 34 pages, 20 figures, submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.13742
Document Type :
Working Paper