Black hole virial masses from single-epoch photometry. The miniJPAS test case

Chaves-Montero, J.; Bonoli, S.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Fernández-Centeno, A.; Queiroz, C.; Díaz-García, L. A.; González Delgado, R. M.; Hernán-Caballero, A.; Hernández-Monteagudo, C.; Lópen-Sanjuan, C.; Overzier, R.; Sobral, D.; Abramo, L. R.; Alcaniz, J.; Benitez, N.; Carneiro, S.; Cenarro, A. J.; Cristóbal-Hornillos, D.; Dupke, R. A.; Ederoclite, A.; Marín-Franch, A.; Mendes de Oliveira, C.; Moles, M.; Sodré, L.; Taylor, K.; Varela, J.; Vázquez Ramió, H.; Civera, T.
Bibliographical reference

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Advertised on:
4
2022
Number of authors
28
IAC number of authors
1
Citations
6
Refereed citations
6
Description
Context. Precise measurements of black hole masses are essential to understanding the coevolution of these sources and their host galaxies.
Aims: We develop a novel approach for computing black hole virial masses using measurements of continuum luminosities and emission line widths from partially overlapping, narrow-band observations of quasars; we refer to this technique as single-epoch photometry.
Methods: This novel method relies on forward-modelling quasar observations for estimating emission line widths, which enables unbiased measurements even for lines coarsely resolved by narrow-band data. We assess the performance of this technique using quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) observed by the miniJPAS survey, a proof-of-concept project of the Javalambre Physics of the Accelerating Universe Astrophysical Survey (J-PAS) collaboration covering ≃1 deg2 of the northern sky using the 56 J-PAS narrow-band filters.
Results: We find remarkable agreement between black hole masses from single-epoch SDSS spectra and single-epoch miniJPAS photometry, with no systematic difference between these and a scatter ranging from 0.4 to 0.07 dex for masses from log(MBH)≃8 to 9.75, respectively. Reverberation mapping studies show that single-epoch masses present approximately 0.4 dex precision, letting us conclude that our novel technique delivers black hole masses with only mildly lower precision than single-epoch spectroscopy.
Conclusions: The J-PAS survey will soon start observing thousands of square degrees without any source preselection other than the photometric depth in the detection band, and thus single-epoch photometry has the potential to provide details on the physical properties of quasar populations that do not satisfy the preselection criteria of previous spectroscopic surveys.
Related projects
 The Invisible Scaffolding of Space
Cosmology with Large Scale Structure Probes

The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) contains the statistical information about the early seeds of the structure formation in our Universe. Its natural counterpart in the local universe is the distribution of galaxies that arises as a result of gravitational growth of those primordial and small density fluctuations. The characterization of the

FRANCISCO SHU
KITAURA JOYANES