The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

Gemini Near Infrared Spectrograph–Distant Quasar Survey: Prescriptions for Calibrating UV-based Estimates of Supermassive Black Hole Masses in High-redshift Quasars

  • Cooper Dix,
  • Brandon Matthews,
  • Ohad Shemmer,
  • Michael S. Brotherton,
  • Adam D. Myers,
  • I. Andruchow,
  • W. N. Brandt,
  • Gabriel A. Ferrero,
  • Richard Green,
  • Paulina Lira,
  • Richard M. Plotkin,
  • Gordon T. Richards,
  • Donald P. Schneider

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acd04b
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 950, no. 2
p. 96

Abstract

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The most reliable single-epoch supermassive black hole mass ( M _BH ) estimates in quasars are obtained by using the velocity widths of low-ionization emission lines, typically the H β λ 4861 line. Unfortunately, this line is redshifted out of the optical band at z ≈ 1, leaving M _BH estimates to rely on proxy rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) emission lines, such as C iv λ 1549 or Mg ii λ 2800, which contain intrinsic challenges when measuring, resulting in uncertain M _BH estimates. In this work, we aim at correcting M _BH estimates derived from the C iv and Mg ii emission lines based on estimates derived from the H β emission line. We find that employing the equivalent width of C iv in deriving M _BH estimates based on Mg ii and C iv provides values that are closest to those obtained from H β . We also provide prescriptions to estimate M _BH values when only C iv , only Mg ii , and both C iv and Mg ii are measurable. We find that utilizing both emission lines, where available, reduces the scatter of UV-based M _BH estimates by ∼15% when compared to previous studies. Lastly, we discuss the potential of our prescriptions to provide more accurate and precise estimates of M _BH given a much larger sample of quasars at 3.20 ≲ z ≲ 3.50, where both Mg ii and H β can be measured in the same near-infrared spectrum.

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