4.7 Article

Properties of active galaxies deduced from HI observations

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 681, Issue 1, Pages 128-140

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/588207

Keywords

galaxies : active; galaxies : bulges; galaxies : ISM; galaxies : kinematics and dynamics; galaxies : nuclei; galaxies : Seyfert

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We have completed a new survey for H I emission for a large, well-defined sample of 154 nearby (z less than or similar to 0.1) galaxies with type 1 (broad-line) active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We make use of the extensive database of H I and optical parameters, presented in a companion paper, to perform a comprehensive appraisal of the cold gas content in active galaxies and to seek new strategies to investigate the global properties of the host galaxies and their relationship to their central black holes. After excluding objects with kinematically anomalous line profiles, which occur with high frequency in the sample, we show that the black hole mass obeys a strong, roughly linear relation with the host galaxy's dynamical mass, calculated by combining the H I line width and the optical size of the galaxy. Black hole mass follows a looser, though still highly significant, correlation with the maximum rotation velocity of the galaxy, as expected from the known scaling between rotation velocity and central velocity dispersion. Neither of these H I-based correlations is as tight as the more familiar relations between black hole mass and bulge luminosity or velocity dispersion, but they offer the advantage of being insensitive to the glare of the nucleus and therefore are promising new tools for probing the host galaxies of both nearby and distant AGNs. We present evidence for substantial ongoing black hole growth in the most actively accreting AGNs. In these nearby systems, black hole growth appears to be delayed with respect to the assembly of the host galaxy but otherwise has left no detectable perturbation to its mass-to-light ratio, as judged from the Tully-Fisher relation, or its global gas content. The host galaxies of type 1 AGNs, including those luminous enough to qualify as quasars, are generally gas-rich systems, possessing a cold interstellar medium reservoir at least as abundant as that in inactive galaxies of the same morphological type. This calls into question current implementations of AGN feedback in models of galaxy formation that predict strong cold gas depletion in unobscured AGNs.

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