Feeding and Feedback from Little Monsters: Black Holes in Dwarf Galaxies

Small nearby galaxy NGC 4395 imaged with the Schulman Telescope at Mount Lemmon Observatory in Arizona (Image credit: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona)
Friday, February 21, 2020 - 15:00 to 16:00
Physics Chemistry Theatre, Science Building

Dr. Mar Mezcua

Institute of Space Sciences (ICE,CSIC), Barcelona, Spain

Abstract: Supermassive black holes of up to one billion solar masses already existed when the Universe was ~0.8 Gyr old. To reach this mass they should have started as seed intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) of between 100 solar masses and 1 million solar masses. Detecting such IMBHs in the early Universe is extremely challenging; however, those that did not grow into supermassive black holes should be found in local dwarf galaxies resembling the first galaxies formed at early epochs.
 
I will show that a population of actively accreting IMBHs exists in local dwarf galaxies and that they can be detected out to z~3 with the use of deep multiwavelength surveys like COSMOS. The black hole occupation fraction of these dwarf galaxies suggests that the early Universe seed black holes formed from direct collapse of pre-galactic gas disk, which is reinforced by the finding that the M-sigma relation flattens at the low-mass end. This scenario is however challenged by the recent finding that AGN feedback can have a very strong impact on dwarf galaxies (e.g. in the form of jet mechanical feedback), which implies that those AGN hosted in dwarf galaxies might not be the untouched relics of the early seed black holes. This has important implications for seed black hole formation models.