Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 642, Issue 2, Pages L111-L114Publisher
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/504842
Keywords
black hole physics; quasars : general
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It has long been believed that accretion onto supermassive black holes powers quasars, but there are still relatively few observational constraints on the spins of the black holes. We address this problem by estimating the average radiative efficiencies of a large sample of quasars selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, by combining their luminosity function and their black hole mass function. Over the redshift interval 0.4 < z < 2.1, we find that quasars have average radiative efficiencies of similar to 30%-35%, strongly suggesting that their black holes are rotating very rapidly, with specific angular momentum a similar to 1, a value that remains roughly constant with redshift. The average radiative efficiency could be reduced by a factor of similar to 2, depending on the adopted zero point for the black hole mass scale. The inferred large spins and their lack of significant evolution are in agreement with the predictions of recent semianalytical models of hierarchical galaxy formation if black holes gain most of their mass through accretion.
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