Evidence that Eddington ratio depends upon a supermassive black hole's mass and redshift: Implications for radiative efficiency (2404.17992v1)
Abstract: Presently, it is unclear whether the Eddington ratio and radiative efficiency depend upon a supermassive black hole's (SMBH's) redshift z and mass MBH. We attempt to resolve this issue using published data for 132,000 SMBHs with MBH >1E+7 Msun (solar masses) at ~0.1<z<2.4 covering ~10 billion years of cosmic time, with MBH determined using MgII lines and bolometric luminosities (Lbol) based on a weighted mean of Lbol from two or more monochromatic luminosities and a single uniformly applied correction factor. The SMBHs are sorted into 7 MBH bins separated from each other by half an order of magnitude. The Eddington ratio and z data in each bin are subjected to spline regression analysis. The results unambiguously show that for similar-size SMBHs, the Eddington ratio decreases as z decreases and that for a given redshift larger SMBHs have a lower Eddington ratio. These findings require that either a SMBH's accretion rate and/or its radiative efficiency be a function of z and MBH and, in the context of the Bondi accretion model, imply that radiative efficiency is an inverse function of a SMBH's redshift z and mass MBH. These findings suggest that SMBHs become less efficient (higher radiative efficiency) in accreting gases as the ambient gas density decreases with z and that larger SMBHs are more efficient (lower radiative efficiency) than smaller ones. The results leave little doubt that the current widespread practice of assigning radiative efficiency a standard value is untenable and gives erroneous estimates of accretion rates and growth times of SMBHs.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.