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6129 lines
339 KiB
TeX
6129 lines
339 KiB
TeX
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%First draft 04/06/05
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%Volker's revisions 05/13/05
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% + Brant's revisions & miscellaneous additions 05/15/05
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% + Lars' final revisions & new figure 05/23/05
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% + Gordon's suggestions 05/28/05
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% Revisions 08/10/05 (referee report)
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\shorttitle{Quasar Origins \&\ Evolution}
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\shortauthors{Hopkins \etal}
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\slugcomment{Submitted to ApJ, June 14, 2005}
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\begin{document}
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\title{A Unified, Merger-Driven Model for the Origin of Starbursts, Quasars,
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the Cosmic X-Ray Background, Supermassive Black Holes and Galaxy Spheroids}
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% Relation Between Supermassive Black Holes and Spheroids in Galaxies}
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\author{Philip F. Hopkins\altaffilmark{1},
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Lars Hernquist\altaffilmark{1},
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Thomas J. Cox\altaffilmark{1},
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Tiziana Di Matteo\altaffilmark{2},
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Brant Robertson\altaffilmark{1},
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Volker Springel\altaffilmark{3}}
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\altaffiltext{1}{Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics,
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60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA}
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\altaffiltext{2}{Carnegie Mellon University,
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Department of Physics, 5000 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15213}
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\altaffiltext{3}{Max-Planck-Institut f\"{u}r Astrophysik,
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Karl-Schwarzchild-Stra\ss e 1, 85740 Garching bei M\"{u}nchen, Germany}
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\begin{abstract}
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We develop an evolutionary model for starbursts, quasars, and
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spheroidal galaxies in which supermassive black holes play a dominant
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role. In this picture, mergers between gas-rich galaxies drive
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nuclear inflows of gas, producing intense starbursts and feeding the
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growth of supermassive black holes. During this phase, the black hole
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is heavily obscured (a ``buried'' quasar), but feedback energy from
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its growth expels the gas, rendering the black hole briefly visible as
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a bright, optical source (a ``visible'' quasar), and eventually
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halting accretion (a ``dead'' quasar). The self-regulated growth of
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the black hole accounts for the observed correlation between black
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hole mass and stellar velocity dispersion in spheroidal galaxies. We
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show that the quasar lifetime and obscuring column density depend on
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both the instantaneous and peak luminosities of the quasar, and
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determine this dependence using a large set of simulations of galaxy
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mergers varying the host galaxy properties, orbital geometry, and gas
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physics.
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We use our fits to the lifetime and column density to deconvolve
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observed quasar luminosity functions and obtain the evolution of the
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formation rate of quasars with a certain peak luminosity, $\dot
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n(L_{\rm peak}, z)$. In our model, quasars spend extended periods of
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time at luminosities well below their peaks, and so $\dot n(L_{\rm
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peak}, z)$ has a maximum, falling off at both brighter and fainter
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luminosities, corresponding to the ``break'' in the observed quasar
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luminosity function. We obtain self-consistent fits to hard and soft
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X-ray and optical quasar luminosity functions for a model in which
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$\dot n(L_{\rm peak}, z)$ varies with redshift according to pure peak
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luminosity evolution. From this form for $\dot n(L_{\rm peak}, z)$,
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and our simulation results for the luminosity dependence of the quasar
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lifetime and obscuring column, we are able to reproduce many
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observable quantities, including: the column density distribution of
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both optical and X-ray selected quasar samples, the luminosity
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function of broad-line quasars in X-ray samples and the broad-line
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(Type I, Type II) fraction as a function of luminosity, the mass
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function of active black holes, the observed distribution of Eddington
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ratios at both low and high redshift, the present-day mass function of
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relic, inactive supermassive black holes and total black hole mass
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density, and the spectrum of the cosmic X-ray background. In each
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case, our predictions agree well with observations, matching them to
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higher precision than previous tunable models for quasar lifetimes and
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obscuration similarly fit to the luminosity function. We provide a
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library of Monte Carlo realizations of our modeling for comparison
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with a wide range of observations, using various selection criteria.
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\end{abstract}
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\keywords{quasars: general --- galaxies: nuclei --- galaxies: active ---
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galaxies: evolution --- cosmology: theory}
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\section{Introduction}
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\label{sec:intro}
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The measurement of anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background
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(e.g.\ Spergel et al.\ 2003) combined with observations of high
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redshift supernovae (e.g.\ Riess et al.\ 1998, 2000; Perlmutter et
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al.\ 1999) have established a ``standard model'' for the Universe, in
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which the energy density is dominated by an unknown form driving
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accelerated cosmic expansion, and most of the mass is non-baryonic, in
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a ratio of roughly 5:1 to ordinary matter. On small scales, it is
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believed that structure formed through gravitational instability. In
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the currently favored cold dark matter (CDM) paradigm, objects grow
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hierarchically, with smaller ones forming first and then merging into
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successively larger bodies. As baryons fall into dark matter
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potential wells, the gas is shocked and then cools radiatively to form
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stars and galaxies, in a ``bottom-up'' progression (White \& Rees
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1978).
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Even with the many successes of this picture, the processes underlying
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galaxy formation and evolution are poorly understood. For example,
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there has yet to be an ab initio calculation, starting from an initial
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state prescribed by the standard model, resulting in a population of
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objects that reproduces observed galaxies. However, from the
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same initial conditions, computer simulations have yielded a new,
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successful interpretation of the Lyman-alpha forest in which
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absorption in caused by density fluctuations in the intergalactic
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medium (e.g.\ Cen et al.\ 1994; Zhang et al.\ 1995; Hernquist et
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al.\ 1996), over many orders of magnitude in column density (e.g.\ Katz
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et al.\ 1996a), explicitly related to growth of structure in a CDM
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universe (e.g.\ Croft et al.\ 1998, 1999, 2002; McDonald et al.\ 2000,
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2004; Hui et al.\ 2001; Viel et al.\ 2003, 2004). This suggests that
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the difficulties with understanding galaxy formation and evolution lie
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not in the initial conditions or with the description of dark matter,
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but rather with the physics that has been used to model the baryons.
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Observations have revealed regularities in the structure of galaxies
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that point to some of this ``missing'' physics. Supermassive black
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holes appear to reside at the centers of most galaxies (e.g.\ Kormendy
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\& Richstone 1995; Richstone et al.\ 1998; Kormendy \& Gebhardt 2001)
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and the masses of these black holes are correlated with either the
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mass (Magorrian et al.\ 1998; McLure \& Dunlop 2002; Marconi \& Hunt
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2003) or the velocity dispersion (i.e.\ the $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma$
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relation: Ferrarese \& Merritt 2000; Gebhardt et al.\ 2000; Tremaine et
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al.\ 2002) of spheroids, demonstrating a direct link between the origin
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of galaxies and supermassive black holes. Simulations which follow
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the self-regulated growth of black holes in galaxy mergers (Di Matteo
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et al.\ 2005; Springel et al.\ 2005a) have shown that the energy
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released through this process has a global impact on the structure of
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the merger remnant. If this conclusion applies to spheroid formation
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in general, the simulations demonstrate that models for the origin and
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evolution of galaxies must account for black hole growth and feedback
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in a fully {\it self-consistent} manner.
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Analytical and semi-analytical
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modeling \citep{SR98,Fabian99,WL02,WL03,BN05} suggests
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that, beyond a certain threshold, feedback energy from black holes can
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expel gas from the centers of galaxies, shutting down accretion onto
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them and limiting their masses. However, these calculations usually
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ignore the impact of this process on star formation and therefore do
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not explain the link between black hole growth and spheroid formation,
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and furthermore make simplifying assumptions about the dynamics of such accretion. For
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example, the duration of black hole growth is a free parameter, which
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is fixed either using observational estimates or assumed to be similar
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to e.g.\ the dynamical time of the host galaxy or the $e$-folding time
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for Eddington-limited black hole growth $t_{S}=M_{\rm
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BH}/\Mdot=4.5\times10^{7}\,l^{-1}\,(\epsilon_r/0.1)\,$yr for accretion
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with radiative efficiency $\epsilon_r=L/\Mdot c^{2}\sim0.1$ and
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$l=L/L_{\rm Edd}\lesssim1$ \citep{Salpeter64}. Moreover, these
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studies have adopted idealized models for quasar light curves, usually
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corresponding to growth at a constant Eddington ratio or
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on-off, ``light bulb,'' scenarios. As we discuss below, less
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restrictive modeling suggests that this phase is actually more
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complex.
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Efforts to model quasar accretion and feedback more self-consistently
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\citep[e.g.,][]{CO97,CO01,Granato04} by treating the hydrodynamical
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response of gas to black hole growth have generally been restricted to
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idealized geometries, such as spherical symmetry, employing simple
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models for star formation and galaxy-scale quasar fueling. However,
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these works have made it possible to estimate duty cycles of quasars
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and shown that the objects left behind have characteristics similar to
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those observed, with quasar feedback being a critical element in
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reproducing these features (e.g.\ Sazonov et al.\ 2005; Kawata \&
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Gibson 2005; Cirasuolo et al.\ 2005; for a review, see Ostriker \&
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Ciotti 2005).
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\citet{SDH05b} have incorporated black hole growth and feedback into
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simulations of galaxy mergers and included a multiphase model for star
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formation and pressurization of the interstellar gas by supernovae
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\citep{SH03} to examine implications of these processes for galaxy
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formation and evolution. Di Matteo et al.\ (2005) and Springel et
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al.\ (2005a,b) have shown that gas inflows excited by gravitational
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torques during a merger both trigger starbursts and fuel rapid black
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hole growth. The growth of the black hole is determined by the gas
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supply and terminates as gas is expelled by feedback, halting
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accretion, leaving a dead quasar in an ordinary galaxy. The
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self-regulated nature of black hole growth in mergers explains
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observed correlations between black hole mass and properties of normal
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galaxies \citep{DSH05}, as well as the color distribution of
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ellipticals \citep{SDH05a}. These results lend support to the view
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that mergers have played an important role in structuring galaxies, as
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advocated especially by Toomre \& Toomre (1972) and Toomre (1977).
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(For reviews, see, e.g., Barnes \& Hernquist 1992; Barnes 1998;
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Schweizer 1998.)
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Subsequent analysis by Hopkins et al.\ (2005a,b,c,d) has shown that the
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merger simulations can account for quasar phenomena as a phase of
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black hole growth. Unlike what has been assumed in e.g.\
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semi-analytical studies of quasars, the simulations predict
|
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complicated evolution for quasar lifetimes, fueling rates for black
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hole accretion, obscuration, and quasar light curves. The light
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|
curves were studied by \citet{H05a,H05b}, who showed that the
|
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self-termination process gives observable lifetimes $\sim10^{7}\,$yr
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for bright optical quasars and predicts a large population of obscured
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|
sources as a natural stage of quasar evolution, as implied by
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|
observations (for a review, see Brandt \& Hasinger 2005).
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\citet{H05b} analyzed simulations over a range of galaxy masses and
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|
found that the quasar light curves and lifetimes are always
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qualitatively similar, with both the intrinsic and observed quasar
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lifetimes being decreasing functions of luminosity, with longer
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lifetimes at all luminosities for higher-mass (higher peak luminosity)
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systems. The dependence of the lifetime on luminosity led
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\citet{H05c} to suggest a new interpretation of the quasar luminosity
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function, in which the steep bright-end consists of quasars radiating
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near the Eddington limit and is directly related to the distribution
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of intrinsic peak luminosities (or final black hole masses) as has
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been assumed previously
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\citep[e.g.,][]{SB92,HL98,HM00,KH00,Somerville01,
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Tully02,WL03,V03,HQB04,Croton05}, but where the
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shallow, faint-end of the luminosity function describes black holes
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growing towards or declining from peak phases of quasar activity, with
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Eddington ratios generally between $l \sim0.01$ and 1. The ``break''
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in the luminosity function corresponds directly to the {\em peak} in
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the distribution of intrinsic quasar properties. As argued by
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\citet{H05c,H05d} this new interpretation of the luminosity function
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can self-consistently explain various properties of both the quasar
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and galaxy populations, connecting the origin of galaxy spheroids,
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supermassive black holes, and quasars.
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%\clearpage
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\begin{figure}
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\centering
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\plotone{f1.ps}
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%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f1.ps}
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\caption{Schematic representation of a ``cosmic cycle'' for
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galaxy formation and evolution regulated by black hole growth in
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mergers.
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\label{fig:cosmiccycle}}
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\end{figure}
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%\clearpage
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Motivated by these results, and earlier work by many others which we
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summarize below, in this paper we consider a picture for galaxy
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formation and evolution, illustrated schematically as a ``cosmic
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cycle'' in Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle}, in which starbursts, quasars,
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and the simultaneous formation of spheroids and supermassive black
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holes represent connected phases in the lives of galaxies. Mergers
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are expected to occur regularly in a hierarchical universe,
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particularly at high redshifts. Those between gas-rich galaxies drive
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nuclear inflows of gas, triggering starbursts and fueling the growth
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of supermassive black holes. During most of this phase, quasar
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|
activity is obscured, but once a black hole dominates the energetics
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of the central region, feedback expels gas and dust, making the black
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|
hole visible briefly as a bright quasar. Eventually, as the gas is
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|
further heated and expelled, quasar activity can no longer be
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|
maintained and the merger remnant relaxes to a normal galaxy with a
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spheroid and a supermassive black hole. In some cases, depending on
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the gas content of the progenitors, the remnant may also have a disk
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|
(Springel \& Hernquist 2005; Robertson et al.\ 2005a). The remnant
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|
will then evolve passively and would be available as a seed to repeat
|
|
the above cycle. As the Universe evolves and more gas is consumed,
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the mergers involving gas-rich galaxies will shift towards lower
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masses, explaining the decline in the population of the brightest
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quasars from $z\sim 2$ to the present, and the remnants that are
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gas-poor will redden quickly owing to the termination of star
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formation by black hole feedback (Springel et al.\ 2005a), so that they
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resemble elliptical galaxies, surrounded by hot X-ray emitting halos
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(e.g.\ Cox et al.\ 2005).
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There is considerable observational support for this scenario, which
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has led the development of this picture for the co-evolution of
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galaxies and quasars over recent decades. Infrared (IR) luminous
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galaxies are thought to be powered in part by starbursts (e.g.\ Soifer
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|
et al.\ 1984a,b; Sanders et al.\ 1986, 1988a,b; for a review, see e.g.\
|
|
Soifer et al.\ 1987), and the most intense examples locally,
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|
ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), are invariably associated
|
|
with mergers (e.g.\ Allen et al.\ 1985; Joseph \& Wright 1985; Armus et
|
|
al.\ 1987; Kleinmann et al.\ 1988; Melnick \& Mirabel 1990; for reviews,
|
|
see Sanders \& Mirabel 1996 and Jogee 2004). Radio observations show
|
|
that ULIRGs have large, central concentrations of dense gas (e.g.\
|
|
Scoville et al.\ 1986; Sargent et al.\ 1987, 1989), providing a fuel
|
|
supply to feed black hole growth. Indeed, some ULIRGs have ``warm''
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|
IR spectral energy distributions (SEDs), suggesting that they harbor
|
|
buried quasars (e.g.\ Sanders et al.\ 1988c), an interpretation
|
|
strengthened by X-ray observations demonstrating the presence of two
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|
non-thermal point sources in NGC6240 \citep{Komossa03}, which are
|
|
thought to be supermassive black holes that are heavily obscured at
|
|
visual wavelengths (e.g.\ Gerssen et al.\ 2004; Max et al.\ 2005,
|
|
Alexander et al.\ 2005a,b). These lines of evidence, together with the
|
|
overlap between bolometric luminosities of ULIRGs and quasars,
|
|
indicate that quasars are the descendents of an infrared luminous
|
|
phase of galaxy evolution caused by mergers (Sanders et al.\ 1988a), an
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|
interpretation supported by observations of quasar hosts (e.g.\
|
|
Stockton 1978; Heckman et al.\ 1984; Stockton \& MacKenty 1987;
|
|
Stockton \& Ridgway 1991; Hutchings \& Neff 1992; Bahcall et al.\ 1994,
|
|
1995, 1997; Canalizo \& Stockton 2001).
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However, many of the physical processes that connect the phases of
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|
evolution in Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle} are not well understood.
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|
Early simulations showed that mergers produce objects resembling
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|
galaxy spheroids (e.g.\ Barnes 1988, 1992; Hernquist 1992, 1993a) and
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|
that if the progenitors are gas-rich, gravitational torques funnel gas
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|
to the center of the remnant (e.g.\ Barnes \& Hernquist 1991, 1996),
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|
producing a starburst (e.g.\ Mihos \& Hernquist 1996), but these works
|
|
did not explore the relationship of these events to black hole growth
|
|
and quasar activity. While a combination of arguments based on time
|
|
variability and energetics suggests that quasars are produced by the
|
|
accretion of gas onto supermassive black holes in the centers of
|
|
galaxies (e.g.\ Salpeter 1964; Zel'dovich \& Novikov 1964; Lynden-Bell
|
|
1969), the mechanism that provides the trigger to fuel quasars
|
|
therefore remains uncertain. Furthermore, there have been no
|
|
comprehensive models that describe the transition between ULIRGs and
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|
quasars that can simultaneously account for observed correlations like
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the $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma$ relation.
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|
Here, we study these relationships using numerical simulations of
|
|
galaxy mergers that account for the consequences of black hole growth.
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|
In our simulations, black holes accrete and grow throughout a merger
|
|
event, producing complex, time-varying quasar activity. Quasars reach
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|
a peak luminosity, $\Lp$, during the ``blowout'' phase of evolution
|
|
where feedback energy from black hole growth begins to drive away the
|
|
gas, eventually slowing accretion. Prior to and following this brief
|
|
period of peak activity, quasars radiate at instantaneous
|
|
luminosities, $L$, with $L < \Lp$. However, we show that even with
|
|
this complex behavior, the global characteristics that determine the
|
|
observed properties of quasars, i.e.\ lifetimes, light curves, and
|
|
obscuration, can be expressed as functions of $L$ and $\Lp$,
|
|
allowing us to make predictions for quasar populations that agree well
|
|
with observations, supporting the scenario sketched in
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|
Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle}.
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|
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|
In \S~\ref{sec:methods}, we discuss our methodology and show how the
|
|
quasar lifetimes and obscuration from our simulations can be expressed
|
|
as functions of the instantaneous and peak luminosities of quasars.
|
|
We also define a set of commonly adopted models for the
|
|
quasar lifetime and obscuration against which we compare our
|
|
predictions throughout. In \S~\ref{sec:LF}, we apply our models to the
|
|
quasar luminosity function, using the observed luminosity function to
|
|
determine the distribution of quasar peak luminosities, and show that
|
|
this allows us to simultaneously reproduce the hard X-ray, soft X-ray,
|
|
and optical quasar luminosity functions at all redshifts $z\lesssim3$,
|
|
and the distribution of column densities in both optical and X-ray
|
|
samples. In \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}, we determine the time in our
|
|
simulations when quasars will be observable as broad-line objects, and
|
|
use this to predict the broad-line luminosity function and fraction of
|
|
broad-line objects in quasar samples, as a function of luminosity, as
|
|
well as the mass function of low-redshift, active broad-line
|
|
quasars. In \S~\ref{sec:eddington}, we estimate the distribution of
|
|
Eddington ratios in our simulations as a function of luminosity, and
|
|
infer Eddington ratios in observed samples at different redshifts. In
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:smbh}, we use our modeling to predict both the mass
|
|
distribution and total density of present-day relic supermassive black
|
|
holes, and describe their evolution with redshift. In \S~\ref{sec:xrb},
|
|
we similarly apply this model to predict the integrated cosmic X-ray
|
|
background spectrum, accounting for the observed spectrum from
|
|
$\sim1-100$\,keV. In \S~\ref{sec:discussion}, we discuss the
|
|
primary qualitative implications of our results and propose
|
|
falsifiable tests of our picture. Finally, in \S~\ref{sec:finis},
|
|
we conclude and suggest directions for future work.
|
|
|
|
Throughout, we adopt a $\Omega_{\rm M}=0.3$, $\Omega_{\Lambda}=0.7$,
|
|
$H_{0}=70\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}\,Mpc^{-1}}$ ($h=0.7$) cosmology.
|
|
|
|
\section{The Model: Methodology}
|
|
\label{sec:methods}
|
|
|
|
Our model of quasar evolution has several elements, which we summarize
|
|
here and describe in greater detail below.
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item In what follows, a ``quasar'' is taken to mean the course of
|
|
black hole activity in a {\em single} merger event. We use the term
|
|
``quasar lifetime'' to refer to the time spent by such a quasar at a
|
|
given luminosity or fraction of the quasar peak luminosity, integrated
|
|
over all black hole activity in a single merger event. This is not
|
|
meant to suggest that this would constitute the entire accretion
|
|
history of a black hole -- a given black hole may have multiple
|
|
``lifetimes'' triggered by different mergers, with each merger in
|
|
principle fueling a distinct ``quasar'' with its own lifetime. There
|
|
is no a priori luminosity threshold for quasar activity -- the time
|
|
history can include various epochs at low luminosities and accretion
|
|
rates.
|
|
|
|
\item We model the galaxy mergers using hydrodynamical simulations,
|
|
varying the orbital parameters of the encounter, the internal
|
|
properties of the merging galaxies, prescriptions for the gas physics,
|
|
initial ``seed'' black hole masses of the merging systems, and
|
|
numerical resolution of the simulations. The black hole accretion
|
|
rate is determined from the surrounding gas (smoothed over the scale
|
|
of our spatial resolution, reaching $20\,$pc in the best cases), i.e.\
|
|
the density and sound speed of the gas, and its motion relative to the
|
|
black hole, using Eddington-limited, Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion
|
|
theory. The black hole radiates with a canonical efficiency
|
|
$\epsilon_{r}=0.1$ corresponding to a standard \citet{SS73} thin disk,
|
|
and we assume that $\sim5\%$ of this radiated luminosity is deposited
|
|
as thermal energy into the surrounding gas, weighted by the SPH
|
|
smoothing kernel (which has a $\sim r^{-2}$ profile) over the scale of
|
|
the spatial resolution. This scale is such that we cannot resolve the
|
|
complex accretion flow immediately around the black hole, but we adopt
|
|
this prescription because: (1) it reproduces the observed slope and
|
|
normalization in the $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation (Di Matteo et al.\
|
|
2005), (2) it follows from observations, based on estimates of the
|
|
energy contained in highly-absorbed UV portion of the quasar SED
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Elvis94,Telfer02}, (3) it follows from theoretical
|
|
considerations of momentum coupling to dust grains in the dense gas
|
|
very near the quasar \citep{Murray05} and hydrodynamical simulations
|
|
of small-scale radiative heating from quasar accretion \citep{CO01},
|
|
and (4) even if the feedback is initially highly collimated, a driven
|
|
wind or shock in a dense region such as the center of the merging
|
|
galaxies will rapidly isotropize, so long as it is decelerated by
|
|
gravity and the surrounding medium, allowing the high sound speed
|
|
within the shock to equalize angle-dependent pressure variations
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{KM90}, and furthermore initial local distortions will
|
|
be washed away in favor of triaxial structure determined by the
|
|
large-scale density gradients \citep{BKS91}, as occurs in our
|
|
simulations.
|
|
|
|
\item For each of our merger simulations, we compute the bolometric
|
|
black hole luminosity and column density along $\sim1000$ lines of
|
|
sight to the black hole(s) (evenly spaced in solid angle), as a
|
|
function of time from the beginning of the simulation until the system
|
|
has relaxed for $\sim1\,$Gyr after the merger.
|
|
|
|
\item We bin different merger simulations by $\Lp$, the peak
|
|
bolometric luminosity of the black hole in the simulation, and the
|
|
conditional distributions of luminosity, $P(L|\Lp)$, and column
|
|
density, $P(\nh | L,\,\Lp)$, are computed using all simulations that
|
|
fall into a given bin in $\Lp$. The final black hole mass (black hole
|
|
mass at the end of the individual merger -- subsequent mergers and
|
|
quasar episodes could further increase the black hole mass) is
|
|
approximately $M_{\rm BH}^{f}\approx M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)$ (but not
|
|
exactly, see \S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}), so we obtain similar
|
|
results if we bin instead by $M_{BH}^{f}$. Our calculation of
|
|
$M_{BH}^{f}(\Lp)$ allows us to express our conditional distributions
|
|
of luminosity and column density in terms of either peak luminosity or
|
|
final black hole mass. Critically, we find that expressed in terms of
|
|
$\Lp$ or $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$, there is no systematic dependence in the
|
|
quasar evolution on the varied merger simulation properties -- this
|
|
allows us to calculate a large number of observables in terms of $\Lp$
|
|
or $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$ without the large systematic uncertainties
|
|
inherent in attempting to directly estimate e.g.\ quasar light curves
|
|
in terms of host galaxy mass, gas fraction, multiphase pressurization
|
|
of the interstellar medium, orbital parameters and merger stage, and
|
|
other variables.
|
|
|
|
\item The observed quasar luminosity function is the convolution of
|
|
the time a given quasar spends at some observed luminosity with the
|
|
rate at which such quasars are created. Knowing the distributions
|
|
$P(L|\Lp)$ and $P(\nh | L,\, \Lp)$, we can calculate the time spent by
|
|
a quasar with some $\Lp$ at an observed luminosity in a given
|
|
waveband. We use this to fit to observational estimates of the
|
|
bolometric quasar luminosity function $\phi(L)$, de-convolving these
|
|
quantities to determine the function $\nLp$; i.e.\ the rate at which
|
|
quasars of a given peak luminosity must be created or activated
|
|
(triggered in mergers) in order to reproduce the observed bolometric
|
|
luminosity function.
|
|
|
|
\item Given these inputs, we determine the joint distribution in
|
|
instantaneous luminosity and black hole mass, column density
|
|
distribution, peak luminosity and final black hole mass, as a function
|
|
of redshift, i.e.\ $n(L,\,L_{\nu},\,M_{\rm BH},\,\nh ,\,\Lp,\,M_{\rm
|
|
BH}^{f}\ |\ z)$, at all redshifts where the observed quasar luminosity
|
|
function can provide the necessary constraint. From this joint
|
|
distribution, we can compute, for example, luminosity functions in
|
|
other wavebands, conditional column density distributions, active
|
|
black hole mass functions and Eddington ratio distributions, and relic
|
|
black hole mass functions and cosmic backgrounds. We can compare each
|
|
of these results to those determined using simpler models for either
|
|
the quasar lifetime or column density distributions; in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:altmodels} we describe a canonical set of such
|
|
models, to which we compare throughout this paper.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Simulations}
|
|
\label{sec:sims}
|
|
|
|
The simulations were performed with {\small GADGET-2}
|
|
\citep{Springel2005}, a new version of the parallel TreeSPH code
|
|
{\small GADGET} \citep{SYW01}. {\small GADGET-2} is based on a fully
|
|
conservative formulation \citep{SH02} of smoothed particle
|
|
hydrodynamics (SPH), which maintains simultaneous energy and entropy
|
|
conservation when smoothing lengths evolve adaptively (for a
|
|
discussion, see e.g., Hernquist 1993b, O'Shea et al.\ 2005). Our
|
|
simulations account for radiative cooling, heating by a UV background
|
|
(as in Katz et al.\ 1996b, Dav\'e et al.\ 1999), and incorporate a
|
|
sub-resolution model of a multiphase interstellar medium (ISM) to
|
|
describe star formation and supernova feedback \citep{SH03}. Feedback
|
|
from supernovae is captured in this sub-resolution model through an
|
|
effective equation of state for star-forming gas, enabling us to
|
|
stably evolve disks with arbitrary gas fractions (see, e.g.\ Springel
|
|
et al.\ 2005b; Robertson et al.\ 2004). In order to investigate the
|
|
consequences of supernova feedback over a range of conditions, we
|
|
employ the scheme of \citet{SDH05b}, introducing a parameter $\qeos$
|
|
to interpolate between an isothermal equation of state ($\qeos=0$) and
|
|
the full multiphase equation of state ($\qeos=1$) described above.
|
|
|
|
Supermassive black holes (BHs) are represented by ``sink'' particles
|
|
that accrete gas at a rate $\Mdot$ estimated using an
|
|
Eddington-limited version of Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion theory
|
|
(Bondi 1952; Bondi \& Hoyle 1944; Hoyle \& Lyttleton 1939). The
|
|
bolometric luminosity of the black hole is $\Lbol=\dEdt$, where
|
|
$\epsilon_r=0.1$ is the radiative efficiency. We assume that a small
|
|
fraction (typically $\approx 5\%$) of $\Lbol$ couples dynamically to
|
|
the surrounding gas, and that this feedback is injected into the gas
|
|
as thermal energy, as described above.
|
|
|
|
We have performed several hundred simulations of colliding galaxies,
|
|
varying the numerical resolution, the orbit of the encounter, the
|
|
masses and structural properties of the merging galaxies, initial gas
|
|
fractions, halo concentrations, and the parameters describing star
|
|
formation and feedback from supernovae and black hole growth. This
|
|
large set of simulations allows us to investigate merger evolution for
|
|
a wide range of galaxy properties and to identify any systematic
|
|
dependence of our modeling. The galaxy models are described in
|
|
\citet{SDH05b}, and we briefly review their properties here.
|
|
|
|
The progenitor galaxies in our simulations have virial
|
|
velocities $\vvir=80,$ $113,$ $160,$ $226,$ $320,$ ${\rm and}\ 500\,{\rm
|
|
km\,s^{-1}}$. We consider cases with gas equation of state parameters
|
|
$\qeos=0.25$ (moderately pressurized, with a mass-weighted temperature
|
|
of star-forming gas $\sim10^{4.5} {\rm K}$) and $\qeos=1.0$ (the full,
|
|
``stiff'' Springel-Hernquist equation of state, with a mass-weighted
|
|
temperature of star-forming gas $\sim10^{5} {\rm K}$), and initial
|
|
disk gas fractions (by mass) of $\fgas=0.2,$ $0.4,$ $0.8,$ ${\rm and}\ 1.0$.
|
|
Finally, we scale these models with redshift, altering the physical
|
|
sizes of the galaxy components and the dark matter halo concentration
|
|
in accord with cosmological evolution \citep{Mo1998}. Details are
|
|
provided in \citet{Robertson05b}, and here we consider galaxy models
|
|
scaled appropriately to resemble galaxies of the same $\vvir, \fgas,
|
|
{\rm and}\ \qeos$ at redshifts $\zgal=0,$ $2,$ $3,$ ${\rm and}\ 6$.
|
|
|
|
For each simulation, we generate two stable, isolated disk galaxies,
|
|
each with an extended dark matter halo with a \citet{Hernquist90}
|
|
profile, motivated by cosmological simulations (e.g.\ Navarro et
|
|
al.\ 1996; Busha et al.\ 2004) and observations of halo properties
|
|
(e.g.\ Rines et al.\ 2002, 2002, 2003, 2004), an exponential disk of
|
|
gas and stars, and (optionally) a bulge. The galaxies have masses
|
|
$M_{\rm vir}=V_{\rm vir}^{3}/(10GH_{0})$ for $\zgal=0$, with the
|
|
baryonic disk having a mass fraction $m_{\rm d}=0.041$, the bulge
|
|
(when present) has a mass fraction $m_{\rm b}=0.0136$, and the rest of
|
|
the mass is in dark matter typically with a concentration parameter
|
|
$c=9.0$. The disk scale-length is computed based on an assumed spin
|
|
parameter $\lambda=0.033$, chosen to be near the mode in the observed
|
|
$\lambda$ distribution \citep{Vitvitska02}, and the scale-length of
|
|
the bulge is set to $0.2$ times the resulting value. In \citet{H05a},
|
|
we describe our analysis of simulation A3, one of our set with
|
|
$\vvir=160\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}},\ \fgas=1.0,\ \qeos=1.0,\ {\rm and}\
|
|
\zgal=0$, a fiducial choice with a rotation curve and mass similar to
|
|
the Milky Way, and \citet{H05b,H05c,H05d} used a set of simulations
|
|
with the same parameters but varying $\vvir=80,$ $113,$ $160,$ $226,$ ${\rm
|
|
and}\ 320\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$, which we refer to below as runs
|
|
A1, A2, A3, A4, and A5, respectively.
|
|
|
|
Typically, each galaxy is initially composed of 168000 dark matter
|
|
halo particles, 8000 bulge particles (when present), 24000 gas and
|
|
24000 stellar disk particles, and one BH particle. We vary the
|
|
numerical resolution, with many of our simulations using instead twice
|
|
as many particles in each galaxy, and a subset of simulations with up
|
|
to 128 times as many particles. We vary the initial seed mass of the
|
|
black hole to identify any systematic dependence of our results on
|
|
this choice. In most cases, we choose the seed mass either in accord
|
|
with the observed $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma$ relation or to be sufficiently
|
|
small that its presence will not have an immediate
|
|
dynamical effect. Given the
|
|
particle numbers employed, the dark matter, gas, and star particles
|
|
are all of roughly equal mass, and central cusps in the dark matter
|
|
and bulge profiles are reasonably well resolved (see Fig 2. in
|
|
Springel et al.\ 2005b). The galaxies are then set to collide from a
|
|
zero energy orbit, and we vary the inclinations of the disks and the
|
|
pericenter separation.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\epsscale{0.9}
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f2.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f2.ps}
|
|
\caption{
|
|
Time sequence from one of our merger simulations
|
|
($V_{\rm vir}=160\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$,
|
|
initial gas fraction 20\%). Each panel is $80\,h^{-1}{\rm kpc}$
|
|
on a side and shows the simulation time in the
|
|
upper left corner. Brightness of individual pixels gives the
|
|
logarithm of the projected stellar mass density, while color hue indicates
|
|
the baryonic gas fraction, from 20\% (blue) to less than 5\% (red).
|
|
At $T=1.03$, $1.39$ and $1.48\,{\rm Gyr}$, when
|
|
the black hole could be seen as an optical quasar,
|
|
nuclear point sources are shown, providing a representation of the
|
|
relative luminosities of stars and the quasar at these times.
|
|
\label{fig:sim.example}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
\epsscale{1}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
A representative example of the behavior of the simulations is
|
|
provided in Figure~\ref{fig:sim.example}, which shows the time
|
|
sequence of a merger involving two bulge-less progenitor galaxies with
|
|
virial velocities of $160\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ and initial gas
|
|
fractions of 20\%. During the merger, gas is driven to the galaxy
|
|
centers by gravitational tides, fueling nuclear starbursts and black
|
|
hole growth. The quasar activity is short-lived and peaks twice in
|
|
this merger, both during the first encounter and the final coalescence
|
|
of the galaxies. To illustrate the bright, optically observable
|
|
phase(s) of quasar activity which we identify below, we have added
|
|
nuclear point sources in
|
|
the center at the position(s) of the black hole(s) at
|
|
times $T=1.03$, $1.39$ and $1.48\,{\rm Gyr}$, generating a
|
|
surface density in correspondence to the relative luminosities of
|
|
stars and quasar at these times. At other times, the accretion
|
|
activity is either obscured or the black hole accretion rate is
|
|
negligible. To make the appearance of the quasar visually more
|
|
apparent, we have put a small part of its luminosity in ``rays''
|
|
around the quasar. These rays are artificial and are only a visual
|
|
guide.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Column Densities \&\ Quasar Attenuation}
|
|
\label{sec:NH}
|
|
|
|
From the simulation outputs, we determine the obscuration of the black
|
|
hole as a function of time during a merger by calculating the column
|
|
density to a distant observer along many lines of sight. Typically,
|
|
we generate $\sim1000$ radial lines-of-sight (rays), each with its
|
|
origin at the black hole location and with directions uniformly spaced
|
|
in solid angle ${\rm d}\cos{\theta}\,{\rm d}\phi$. For each ray, we
|
|
begin at the origin and calculate and record the local gas properties
|
|
using the SPH formalism and move a distance along the ray $\Delta
|
|
r=\eta h_{\rm sml}$, where $\eta \leq 1$ and $h_{\rm sml}$ is the
|
|
local SPH smoothing length. The process is repeated until a ray is
|
|
sufficiently far from the origin ($\gtrsim 100$ kpc) that the column
|
|
has converged. We then integrate the gas properties along a
|
|
particular ray to give the line-of-sight column density and mean
|
|
metallicity. We have varied $\eta$ and find empirically that gas
|
|
properties along a ray converge rapidly and change smoothly for
|
|
$\eta=0.5$ and smaller. We similarly vary the number of rays and find
|
|
that the distribution of line-of-sight properties converges for
|
|
$\gtrsim 100$ rays.
|
|
|
|
{}From the local gas properties, we use the multiphase model of the
|
|
ISM described in \citet{SH03} to determine the mass fraction in
|
|
``hot'' (diffuse) and ``cold'' (molecular and HI cloud core) phases of
|
|
dense gas and, assuming pressure equilibrium, we obtain the local
|
|
density of the hot and cold phases and their corresponding volume
|
|
filling factors. The resulting values are in rough agreement with
|
|
those of \citet{MO77}. Given a temperature for the warm, partially
|
|
ionized component of the hot-phase $\sim8000\,{\rm K}$, determined by
|
|
pressure equilibrium, we further calculate the neutral fraction of
|
|
this gas, typically $\sim0.3-0.5$. We denote the neutral and total
|
|
column densities as \NHI\ and \NH, respectively. Using only the
|
|
hot-phase density allows us to place an effective lower limit on the
|
|
column density along a particular line of sight, as it assumes a given
|
|
ray passes only through the diffuse ISM, with $\gtrsim 90\%$ of the
|
|
mass of the dense ISM concentrated in cold-phase ``clumps.'' Given the
|
|
small volume filling factor ($<0.01$) and cross section of cold
|
|
clouds, we expect that the majority of sightlines will pass only
|
|
through the ``hot-phase'' component.
|
|
|
|
Using $\Lbol=\dEdt$, we model the intrinsic quasar continuum SED
|
|
following \citet{Marconi04}, based on optical through hard X-ray
|
|
observations
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Elvis94,George98,VB01,Perola02,Telfer02,Ueda03,VBS03},
|
|
with a reflection component generated by the PEXRAV model
|
|
\citep{MZ95}. This yields, for example, a B-band luminosity
|
|
$\log{(\LB/L_{\sun})}=0.80-0.067\mathcal{L}+0.017\mathcal{L}^{2}-0.0023\mathcal{L}^{3}$,
|
|
where $\mathcal{L} = \log{(\Lbol/L_{\sun})} - 12$, and we take
|
|
$\lambda_{B}=4400\,$\AA, but as we model the entire intrinsic SED we
|
|
can determine the bolometric correction in any frequency interval.
|
|
|
|
We then use a gas-to-dust ratio to determine the extinction along a
|
|
given line of sight at optical frequencies. Observations suggest that
|
|
the majority of reddened quasars have reddening curves similar to that
|
|
of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC; Hopkins et al.\ 2004, Ellison et
|
|
al.\ 2005), which has a gas-to-dust ratio lower than the Milky Way by
|
|
approximately the same factor as its metallicity \citep{Bouchet85}.
|
|
Hence, we consider both a gas-to-dust ratio equal to that of the Milky
|
|
Way, $(A_{B}/\nhi)_{\rm MW}=8.47\times10^{-22}\,{\rm cm^{2}}$, and a
|
|
gas-to-dust ratio scaled by metallicity, $A_{B}/\nhi =
|
|
(Z/0.02)(A_{B}/\nhi)_{\rm MW}$. In both cases we use the SMC-like
|
|
reddening curve of \citet{Pei92}. The form of the correction for hard
|
|
X-ray (2-10 keV) and soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV) luminosities is similar to
|
|
that of the B-band luminosity. We calculate extinction at X-ray
|
|
frequencies (0.03-10 keV) using the photoelectric absorption cross
|
|
sections of \citet{MM83} and non-relativistic Compton scattering cross
|
|
sections, similarly scaled by metallicity. In determining the column
|
|
density for photoelectric X-ray absorption, we ignore the inferred
|
|
ionized fraction of the gas, as it is expected that the inner-shell
|
|
electrons which dominate the photoelectric absorption edges will be
|
|
unaffected in the temperature ranges of interest. We do not perform a
|
|
full radiative transfer calculation, and therefore do not model
|
|
scattering or re-processing of radiation by dust in the infrared.
|
|
|
|
For a full comparison of quasar lifetimes and column densities
|
|
obtained varying our calculation of \NH, we refer to \citet{H05b} (see
|
|
their Figures 1, 5, \& 6), and note their conclusion that, after
|
|
accounting for clumping of most mass in the dense ISM in cold-phase
|
|
structures, the column density does not depend sensitively on our
|
|
assumptions for the small-scale physics of the ISM and obscuration --
|
|
typically, the uncertainties in the resulting quasar lifetime as a
|
|
function of luminosity are a factor $\sim2$ at low luminosities in the
|
|
B-band, and smaller in e.g.\ the hard X-ray. Because our
|
|
determination of the quasar luminosity functions is similar using the
|
|
hard X-ray data alone or the hard X-ray, soft X-ray, and optical data
|
|
simultaneously, the added uncertainties in our calculation of $\nLp$
|
|
in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF} below owing to the uncertainty in our $\nh$
|
|
calculation are small compared to the uncertainties owing to
|
|
degeneracies in the fitting procedure and uncertain bolometric
|
|
corrections.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The \NH\ Distribution as a Function of Luminosity}
|
|
\label{sec:NHfunction}
|
|
|
|
Next, we consider the distribution of column densities as a function
|
|
of both the instantaneous and peak quasar luminosities. For each
|
|
simulation, we consider \NH\ values at all times with a given
|
|
bolometric luminosity $L$ (in some logarithmic interval in $L$), and
|
|
determine the distribution of column densities at that $L$ weighted by
|
|
the total time along all sightlines with a given \NH. At each $L$, we
|
|
approximate the simulated distribution and fit it to a lognormal form,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
P(N_{H}) = \frac{1}{\sigNH \sqrt{2 \pi}}\, \exp\left[
|
|
\frac{-\log^2(N_{H}/\meanNH )}{2 \sigNH^{2}}\right].
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
This provides a good fit for all but the brightest luminosities, where
|
|
quasar feedback becomes important driving the ``blowout'' phase, and
|
|
the quasar sweeps away surrounding gas and dust to become optically
|
|
observable.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f3.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f3.ps}
|
|
\caption{The median fitted total (neutral and ionized) column
|
|
density $\meanNH$ at each luminosity $L$ in the snapshots from our
|
|
series of simulations described in \S~\ref{sec:methods}. We compare changing
|
|
concentrations and halo properties with redshift $\zgal$ (upper
|
|
left), gas fractions $\fgas$ (upper right), the equation of state
|
|
parameter $\qeos$ (lower left), and virial velocity $\vvir$ (lower
|
|
right). At lower right, simulations with $\vvir=80, 113, 160,
|
|
226, 320, {\rm and}\ 500\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ are shown as black
|
|
asterisks, purple dots, red diamonds, green triangles, yellow
|
|
squares, and red crosses, respectively. Other than a possible
|
|
weak sensitivity to $\qeos$, the column density distribution as a
|
|
function of luminosity shows no systematic dependence on any of
|
|
the varied simulation parameters.
|
|
\label{fig:NH.systematics}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
We show the resulting median column density $\meanNH$ at each
|
|
luminosity $L$ in Figure~\ref{fig:NH.systematics}. In the upper left
|
|
panel, simulations with $\zgal=0$ are shown in black, those with
|
|
$\zgal=2$ in blue, and those with $\zgal=3$ in yellow. In the upper
|
|
right, simulations with $\fgas=0.4$ are shown in black, those with
|
|
$\fgas=0.8$ in red. In the lower left, simulations with $\qeos=0.25$
|
|
are shown in black, those with $\qeos=1.0$ in green. And in the lower
|
|
right, simulations with $\vvir=80, 113, 160, 226, 320, {\rm and}\
|
|
500\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ are shown as black asterisks, purple dots, red
|
|
diamonds, green triangles, yellow squares, and red crosses,
|
|
respectively. Simulations with other values for these parameters (not
|
|
shown for clarity, but see e.g. Hopkins et al.\ [2005d]) show similar
|
|
trends.
|
|
|
|
While the increase in typical $\nh$ values with luminosity
|
|
appears to contradict observations suggesting that the obscured
|
|
fraction decreases with luminosity, this is because the relationship
|
|
shown above is dominated by quasars in growing, heavily obscured
|
|
phases. In these stages, the relationship between column density and
|
|
luminosity is a natural consequence of the fact that both are fueled
|
|
by strong gas flows into the central regions of the galaxy -- more gas
|
|
inflow means higher luminosities, but also higher column densities.
|
|
During these phases, the lognormal fits to column density as a
|
|
function of instantaneous and peak luminosity presented in this
|
|
section are reasonable approximations, but they break down in the
|
|
brightest, short-lived stages of merger activity when the quasar
|
|
rapidly heats the surrounding gas and drives a powerful wind, lowering
|
|
the column density, resulting in a bright, optically observable
|
|
quasar. Including in greater detail the effects of quasar blowout
|
|
during the final stages of its growth in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}, we find
|
|
that this modeling actually predicts the observed decrease in obscured
|
|
fraction with luminosity.
|
|
|
|
The relationship between \NH\ and $L$ shows no strong systematic
|
|
dependence on any of the simulation parameters considered. At most,
|
|
there is weak sensitivity to $\qeos$, in the sense that the
|
|
simulations with $\qeos=1.0$ have slightly larger column densities at
|
|
a given luminosity than those with $\qeos=0.25$. We derive an
|
|
analytical model relating both the observed column density and quasar
|
|
luminosity to the inflowing mass of gas in \citet{H05d}, by
|
|
assuming that while it is growing, the black hole mass is proportional
|
|
to the inflowing gas mass in the galaxy core (which ultimately
|
|
produces the Magorrian et al.\ [1998] relation between black hole and
|
|
bulge mass), and assuming Bondi accretion, with obscuration along a
|
|
sightline through this (spherically symmetric) gas inflow. Such a
|
|
model gives the observed correlation between $N_{\rm H}$ and $L$, and
|
|
explains the weak dependence of the column density-luminosity relation
|
|
on the ISM gas equation of state. The assumptions above give a
|
|
relationship of the form
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nh\sim f_{0}\,\frac{1}{m_{H} R_{c}}\,\Bigl( \frac{c_{s}}{c}\Bigr)\,\Bigl( \frac{c L}{G^{2}}\Bigr)^{1/3},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $f_{0}\sim50$ is a dimensionless factor depending on the
|
|
radiative efficiency, mean molecular weight, density profile, and
|
|
assumed $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation; $m_{H}$ is the mass of hydrogen;
|
|
$R_{c}$ the radius of the galaxy core ($\sim100\,{\rm pc}$); and
|
|
$c_{s}$ the effective sound speed in the central regions of the galaxy. A
|
|
$\qeos=1.0$ equation of state, with a higher effective temperature,
|
|
results in a factor of $\approx2$ larger sound speed in the densest
|
|
regions of the galaxy than a $\qeos=0.25$ equation of state
|
|
\citep{SDH05b}, explaining the weak trend seen. In any event,
|
|
the dependence is small compared to the intrinsic scatter for either
|
|
equation of state in the value of $\meanNH$ at a given luminosity, and
|
|
further weakens at high luminosity, so it can be neglected.
|
|
What may appear to be a systematic offset in $\meanNH$ with
|
|
$\vvir$ is actually just a tendency for larger $\vvir$ systems to be
|
|
at higher luminosities; there is no significant change in the
|
|
dependence of \NH\ on $L$.
|
|
|
|
We use our large set of simulations to improve our fits (relative to
|
|
those of Hopkins et al.\ 2005d) to the \NH\ distribution as a function
|
|
of instantaneous and peak luminosities. Looking at individual
|
|
simulations, there appears to be a ``break'' in the power-law
|
|
scaling of $\meanNH$ with $L$ at $L\sim\Lcut{11}$. We find that the
|
|
best fit to the median column density $\meanNH$ is then
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\meanNH = \left\{ \begin{array}{ll}
|
|
10^{22.8}\, {\rm cm^{-2}} \Bigl( \frac{L}{\Lp}\Bigr)^{0.54} & \mathrm{ if\ } L < \Lcut{11} \\
|
|
10^{21.9}\, {\rm cm^{-2}} \Bigl( \frac{L}{\Lcut{11}}\Bigr)^{0.43} & \mathrm{ if\ } L > \Lcut{11}.
|
|
\end{array}
|
|
\right.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Either of these two relations provides an acceptable fit to the
|
|
plotted $\meanNH$ distribution if applied to the entire luminosity
|
|
range ($\reducechi\approx2.8,\,3.2$ for the first and second
|
|
relations, respectively), but their combination provides a
|
|
significantly better fit ($\reducechi\approx1.5$), although it is
|
|
clear from the large scatter in $\meanNH$ values that any such fit is
|
|
a rough approximation. Despite the complicated form of this equation,
|
|
it is, in practice, similar to our $\meanNH\propto L^{0.35}$
|
|
fit from previous work and $\meanNH\propto L^{1/3}$ analytical scaling
|
|
over the range of relevant luminosities, but is more accurate by a
|
|
factor $\sim2-3$ at low ($\lesssim\Lcut{9}$) luminosities. For
|
|
comparison, however, we do consider this simpler form for $\nh(L)$ as
|
|
well as our more accurate fit above in our subsequent analysis, and
|
|
find that it makes little difference to most observable quasar
|
|
properties. At the highest luminosities, near the peak luminosities
|
|
of the brightest quasars, the scatter about these fitted median
|
|
$\meanNH$ values increases, and as noted above the impact of the
|
|
quasar in expelling surrounding gas becomes important and column
|
|
densities vary rapidly. We consider this ``blowout'' phase in more
|
|
detail in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}.
|
|
|
|
We find that any dependence of $\sigNH$ (the fitted lognormal
|
|
dispersion) on $L$ or $L_{\rm peak}$ is not statistically significant,
|
|
with approximately constant $\sigNH\approx 0.4$ for individual
|
|
simulations. We similarly find no systematic dependence of $\sigNH$ on
|
|
any of our varied simulation parameters. However, it is important to
|
|
note that while the dispersion in \NH\ for an individual simulation is
|
|
$\sigNH\approx 0.4$, the dispersion in $\meanNH$ across all simulations at a
|
|
given luminosity is large, $\sim1$ dex. Thus, we fit the effective
|
|
$\sigNH$ at a given luminosity for the {\em distribution} of quasars
|
|
and find it is $\sigNH\approx 1.2$. Although we have slightly revised our
|
|
fits for greater accuracy at low luminosities, we note that this
|
|
relation is shallower than the relation $\nh\propto L$ roughly
|
|
expected if $M_{\rm BH}$ is constant ($L\propto\rho\propto\nh$) or
|
|
$L\propto M_{\rm BH}$ always, and strongly contrasts with unification
|
|
models which predict static obscuration, or evolutionary
|
|
models in which \NH\ is independent of $L$ up to some threshold
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Fabian99}.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Quasar Lifetimes \&\ Sensitivity to Simulation Parameters}
|
|
\label{sec:detailsCompare}
|
|
|
|
We define the luminosity-dependent quasar lifetime $\tQ=\tQ(\Lm)$ as
|
|
the time a quasar has a luminosity above a certain reference
|
|
luminosity $\Lm$; i.e.\ the total time the quasar shines at
|
|
$L\geq\Lm$. For ease of comparison across frequencies, we measure the
|
|
lifetime in terms of the bolometric luminosity, $L$, rather than e.g.\
|
|
the B-band luminosity. Knowing the distribution of column densities
|
|
\NH\ as a function of luminosity and system properties (see
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:NHfunction}), we can then analytically or numerically
|
|
calculate the distribution of observed lifetimes at any frequency if
|
|
we know this intrinsic lifetime. Below $\sim1$ Myr, our estimates of
|
|
\tq\ become uncertain owing to the effects of quasar variability and
|
|
our inability to resolve the local small-scale physics of the ISM, but
|
|
this is significantly shorter than even the most rapid timescales
|
|
$\sim10$\,Myr of substantial quasar evolution.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f4.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f4.ps}
|
|
\caption{Integrated intrinsic quasar lifetime above a given
|
|
reference bolometric luminosity, $t_{Q}(L)$, as a function of
|
|
luminosity for simulations with host galaxies with total mass
|
|
(top panel) $M_{\rm gal}=0.5-2.0\times10^{12}\,M_{\sun}$, and
|
|
simulations with final black hole masses (bottom panel)
|
|
$\mbhf=0.5-2.0\times10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$ (i.e.\ similar peak
|
|
luminosity $\Lp\sim\Lcut{12}$). The simulations cover a range in
|
|
equation of state parameter $\qeos$, initial disk gas fraction
|
|
$\fgas$, galaxy redshift (for scaling of halo properties) $\zgal$,
|
|
and virial velocities $\vvir=113-160\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$. The black
|
|
line in both cases is for a merger involving Milky Way-like galaxy
|
|
models, which we refer to as A3, with $\fgas=1,\,\qeos=1,\,\zgal=0,\
|
|
{\rm and}\ \vvir=160\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$.
|
|
\label{fig:tQ.systematics}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
As before, we use our diverse sample of simulations to test for
|
|
systematic effects in our parameterization of the quasar lifetime.
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:tQ.systematics} shows the quasar lifetime as a
|
|
function of reference luminosity $\Lm$ for both a set of simulations
|
|
with similar total galaxy mass, $M_{\rm gal}\approx10^{12}\,M_{\sun}$,
|
|
and similar final black hole mass (i.e.\ similar peak quasar
|
|
luminosity), $\mbhf\approx10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$. In each case, the
|
|
simulations cover a range in $\qeos,$ $\fgas,$ $\zgal,$ ${\rm and}\ \vvir$.
|
|
|
|
As Figure~\ref{fig:tQ.systematics} demonstrates, at a given $M_{\rm
|
|
gal}$, there is a wide range of lifetimes, with a systematic
|
|
dependence on several quantities. For example, for fixed $M_{\rm
|
|
gal}$, a lower $\qeos$ means that the gas is less pressurized and more
|
|
easily collapses to high density, resulting in larger $\mbhf$ and
|
|
longer lifetimes at higher luminosities. Similarly, higher $\fgas$
|
|
provides more fuel for black hole growth at fixed $M_{\rm gal}$.
|
|
However, for a given $\mbhf$, the lifetime \tq\ as a function of $\Lm$
|
|
is similar across simulations and shows no systematic dependence on
|
|
any of the varied parameters. We find this for all final black hole
|
|
masses in our simulations, in the range
|
|
$\mbhf\sim10^{6}-10^{10}\,M_{\sun}$. We have further tested this as a
|
|
function of resolution, comparing with alternate realizations of our
|
|
fiducial A3 simulation with up to 128 times as many particles, and
|
|
find similar results as a function of $\mbhf$.
|
|
|
|
From Figure~\ref{fig:tQ.systematics}, it is clear that the final black
|
|
hole mass or peak luminosity is a better variable to use in describing
|
|
the lifetime than the host galaxy mass. The lack of any systematic
|
|
dependence of either the quasar lifetime or \NH($L,\Lp$) on host
|
|
galaxy properties implies that our earlier results (Hopkins et al.\
|
|
2005a-d) are reliable and can be applied to a wide range of host
|
|
galaxy properties, redshifts, and luminosities, although we refine and
|
|
expand the various fits of these works and their applications herein.
|
|
Furthermore, the large scatter in \tq\ at a given galaxy mass has
|
|
important implications for the quasar correlation function as a
|
|
function of luminosity, as one cannot associate a single quasar
|
|
luminosity with hosts of a given mass (see Lidz et al.\ 2005).
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f5.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f5.ps}
|
|
\caption{Fits to the quasar lifetime as a
|
|
function of luminosity from our simulations. Upper left
|
|
shows the intrinsic, bolometric quasar lifetime $t_{Q}$ of a set
|
|
of simulations with $\Lp$ within a factor of 2 of
|
|
$\Lcut{10}$, in the manner of
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:tQ.systematics}. The black histogram shows the
|
|
geometric mean of these lifetimes, and the black histogram in the
|
|
lower left shows the differential lifetime $\dtdL$ from this
|
|
geometric mean. The black thick line in the upper left and red
|
|
line in the lower left show the best-fit to our analytical
|
|
form, $\dtdL=t^{\ast}_{Q}\,\exp(-L/L^{\ast}_{Q})$. Upper right
|
|
shows the fitted $t^{\ast}_{Q}$ and resulting errors in each peak
|
|
luminosity (final black hole mass) interval, and the best-fit
|
|
power-law to $t^{\ast}_{Q}(\Lp)$ (red line). Lower right shows the fitted
|
|
$L^{\ast}_{Q}$ and resulting errors in each peak luminosity (final
|
|
black hole mass) interval, and the best-fit proportionality
|
|
$L^{\ast}_{Q}\propto\Lp$ (red line).
|
|
\label{fig:show.fits}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Although the truncated power-laws we have previously fitted to \tq\
|
|
using only the A-series simulations \citep{H05b} provide
|
|
acceptable fits to all our runs, we use our new, larger set of simulations
|
|
to improve the accuracy of the fits and average over peculiarities of
|
|
individual simulations, giving a more robust prediction of the
|
|
lifetime as a function of instantaneous and peak luminosity. For a
|
|
given peak luminosity $\Lp$, we consider simulations with an $\Lp$
|
|
within a factor of 2, and take the geometric mean of their lifetimes
|
|
\tq($L$) (we ignore any points where $\tQ<1$\,Myr, as our calculated
|
|
lifetimes are uncertain below this limit). We can then differentiate
|
|
this numerically to obtain $\dtdL$ (the time spent in a given
|
|
logarithmic luminosity interval), and fit some functions to both
|
|
curves simultaneously. Figure~\ref{fig:show.fits} illustrates this and
|
|
shows the results of our fitting. We find that both the integrated
|
|
lifetime \tq($L$) and the differential lifetime $\dtdL$ are well
|
|
fitted by an exponential,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\dtdL=t^{\ast}_{Q}\, \exp [-L/L^{\ast}_{Q}],
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where both $t^{\ast}_{Q}$ and $L^{\ast}_{Q}$ are functions of $\mbhf$
|
|
or $\Lp$. The best-fit such $\dtdL$ is shown in the figure as a solid
|
|
line for simulations with $\Lp\sim\Lcut{10}$, and agrees well
|
|
with both the numerical derivative $\dtdL$ (lower left, black
|
|
histogram) and the geometric mean $\tQ(L)$ (upper left, black
|
|
histogram). This of course implies
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\tQ(L)=t^{\ast}_{Q}\,\int^{\Lp}_{L}e^{-L/L^{\ast}_{Q}}\,d\log{L},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
but we are primarily interested in $\dtdL$ in our subsequent
|
|
analysis.
|
|
|
|
Although our fitted lifetime involves an exponential, it is in no way
|
|
similar to the exponential light curve of constant Eddington-ratio
|
|
black hole growth or the model in, e.g., \citet{HL98}, which give
|
|
$\dtdL=$\,{\em constant}\,$\sim t_{S}\ll t^{\ast}_{Q}$.
|
|
|
|
Our
|
|
functional form also has the advantage that, although it should formally be
|
|
truncated with $\dtdL=0$ for $L>\Lp$, the values in this regime fall
|
|
off so quickly that we can safely use the above fit for all large
|
|
$L$. Similarly, at $L\lesssim10^{-4}\,\Lp$, $\dtdL$ falls below the
|
|
constant $t^{\ast}_{Q}$ to which this equation
|
|
asymptotes. Furthermore, in this regime, the fits above begin to
|
|
differ significantly from those obtained by fitting e.g.\ truncated
|
|
power-laws or Schechter functions. However, these luminosities are
|
|
well below those we generally consider and well below the luminosities
|
|
where the contribution of a quasar with some $\Lp$ is significant to
|
|
the observed quantities we predict. Moreover, this turndown (i.e.\ the
|
|
lower value predicted by an exponential as opposed to a power-law or
|
|
Schechter function at low luminosities) is at least in part an
|
|
artifact of the finite simulation duration. The values here are also
|
|
significantly more uncertain, as by these low relative accretion
|
|
rates, the system is likely to be accreting in some low-efficiency,
|
|
ADAF state (e.g.\ Narayan \& Yi 1995), which we do not implement
|
|
directly in our simulations. Rather than introduce additional
|
|
uncertainties into our modeling when they do not affect our
|
|
predictions, we adopt these exponential fits which are
|
|
accurate at $L\gtrsim10^{-4}-10^{-3}\,\Lp$. However, for purposes
|
|
where the faint-end behavior of the quasar lifetime is important,
|
|
such as predicting the value and evolution of the faint-end quasar
|
|
luminosity function slope with redshift, a more detailed examination
|
|
of the lifetime at low luminosities and relaxation of quasars after
|
|
the ``blowout'' phase is necessary, and we consider these issues
|
|
separately in \citet{H05f}.
|
|
|
|
We also note that in \citet{H05c} we considered several extreme limits
|
|
to our modeling, neglecting all times before the final merger and
|
|
applying an ADAF correction at low accretion rates (taken
|
|
into account a posteriori by rescaling the radiative efficiency
|
|
$\epsilon_{r}$ with accretion rate, given the assumption that such low
|
|
accretion rates do not have a large dynamical effect on the system
|
|
regardless of radiative efficiency), and found that this does not
|
|
change our results -- the lifetime at low luminosities
|
|
may be slightly altered but the key qualitative point, that the quasar
|
|
lifetime increases with decreasing luminosity, is robust against a
|
|
wide range of limits designed to decrease the lifetime at low
|
|
luminosities.
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:show.fits} further shows the fitted $t^{\ast}_{Q}$
|
|
(upper right) and $L^{\ast}_{Q}$ (lower right) as a function of peak
|
|
quasar luminosity for each $\Lp$. We find that
|
|
$L^{\ast}_{Q}$, the luminosity above which the lifetime rapidly
|
|
decreases, is proportional to $\Lp$,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
L^{\ast}_{Q}=\alpha_{L}\Lp ,
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
with a best fit coefficient $\alpha_{L}=0.20$ (solid line). The weak
|
|
dependence of $t^{\ast}_{Q}$ on $\Lp$ is well-described by a power-law,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
t^{\ast}_{Q}=t^{(10)}_{\ast}\,\Bigl( \frac{\Lp}{\Lcut{10}}\Bigr)^{\alpha_{T}},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
with $t^{(10)}_{\ast}=1.37\times10^{9}\,{\rm yr}$ and
|
|
$\alpha_{T}=-0.11$
|
|
%, and a double power-law fit (solid line),
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
%t^{\ast}_{Q}=t^{(10)}_{\ast}\,\left[\Bigl(
|
|
%\frac{\Lp}{\Lcut{10}}\Bigr)^{\alpha_{T}}+\Bigl(
|
|
%\frac{\Lp}{\Lcut{10}}\Bigr)^{\beta_{T}}\right],
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
%with $t^{(10)}_{\ast}=8.8\times10^{8}\,{\rm yr}$, $\alpha_{T}=-0.71$,
|
|
%and $\beta_{T}=-0.07$. We have carried out our analysis with both
|
|
%functions and find no significant differences except for slight
|
|
%corrections to the high-mass end of the relic black hole mass
|
|
%function (see \S~\ref{sec:smbh}). Unless otherwise specified, we adopt the double
|
|
%power-law form for our calculations, as it gives a marginally better
|
|
%fit to the simulation lifetimes.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f6.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f6.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted quasar lifetime as a function of luminosity
|
|
compared to that obtained in simulations with and without bulges
|
|
and with different initial seed black hole masses. All simulations shown
|
|
in this plot
|
|
are initially identical to our fiducial A3 (Milky Way-like) case,
|
|
but with or without an initial stellar bulge and with an initial
|
|
seed black hole mass as labeled. Diamonds show the predicted
|
|
quasar lifetime $t_{Q}$, a function of the peak luminosity of each
|
|
simulated quasar, determined from the fits shown in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:show.fits}. Crosses show the lifetime determined
|
|
directly in the simulations.
|
|
\label{fig:check.MBHbulge}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
The presence or absence of a stellar bulge in the progenitors can have
|
|
a significant impact on the quasar light curve (Springel et al.
|
|
2005b), primarily affecting the strength of the strong accretion phase
|
|
associated with initial passage of the merging galaxies (e.g.\ Mihos
|
|
\& Hernquist 1994). Likewise, the seed mass of the simulation black
|
|
holes could have an effect, as black holes with smaller initial masses
|
|
will spend more time growing to large sizes, and more massive black
|
|
holes may be able to shut down early phases of accretion in mergers in
|
|
minor ``blowout'' events. In Figure~\ref{fig:check.MBHbulge}, we show
|
|
various tests to examine the robustness of our fitted quasar lifetimes
|
|
to these variations. We have re-run our fiducial Milky Way-like A3
|
|
simulation both with (right panels) and without (left panels) initial
|
|
stellar bulges in the merging galaxies and varying the initial black
|
|
hole seed masses from $10^{4}-10^{7}\,M_{\sun}$. In each case we
|
|
compare the lifetime $t_{Q}$ determined directly from the simulations
|
|
(crosses) to that predicted from our fits above (diamonds), based only
|
|
on the peak luminosity (final black hole mass) of the simulated
|
|
quasar. Again, we find that varying these simulation parameters can
|
|
have a significant effect on the final black hole mass, but that the
|
|
quasar lifetime as a function of peak luminosity is a robust quantity,
|
|
independent of initial black hole mass or the presence or absence of a
|
|
bulge in the quasar host.
|
|
|
|
We can integrate the total radiative output of our model quasars,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
E_{\rm rad}=\int^{\Lp}_{L_{\rm min}} L\,\fdtdL {\rm d}\log L,
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
and using our fitted formulae and $L_{\rm min}\ll L^{\ast}_{Q}$
|
|
we find
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
E_{\rm rad}=L^{\ast}_{Q}\, t^{\ast}_{Q}\,\log{e}\,(1-e^{-\Lp/L^{\ast}_{Q}}).
|
|
\label{eq:Erad}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Knowing $E_{\rm rad}=\epsilon_{r}\mbhf c^{2}$, we can compare the
|
|
final black hole mass as a function of peak luminosity to what we
|
|
would expect if the peak luminosity were the Eddington
|
|
luminosity of a black hole with mass $M_{\rm Edd}$, $L_{\rm
|
|
Edd}=\epsilon_{r}M_{\rm Edd} c^{2}/t_{S}$, where $t_{S}$ is the
|
|
Salpeter time for $\epsilon_{r}=0.1$. Equating $E_{\rm
|
|
rad}=\epsilon_{r}\mbhf c^{2}$ with the value calculated in
|
|
Equation~\ref{eq:Erad}, and using the definition of the Eddington mass
|
|
at $L=\Lp$ and our fitted $L^{\ast}_{Q}=\alpha_{L}\Lp$, we obtain
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\frac{\mbhf(\Lp)}{M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)}=\alpha_{L} \Bigl( \frac{t^{\ast}_{Q}}{t_{S}}\Bigr) \log e
|
|
\approx1.24\, f_{T},
|
|
\label{eq:Mbhf}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $f_{T}=(\Lp/\Lcut{13})^{-0.11}$ for the power-law fit to
|
|
$t^{\ast}_{Q}$. For our calculations explicitly involving black hole
|
|
mass, we adopt this conversion unless otherwise noted, as we have
|
|
performed our primary calculation (i.e.\ calculated $\nLp$) in terms
|
|
of peak luminosity. Moreover, although this agrees well with
|
|
the black hole masses in our simulations as a function of peak
|
|
luminosity (as it must if the fitted quasar lifetimes are accurate),
|
|
this allows us to smoothly interpolate to the highest black hole
|
|
masses ($\sim {\rm a\ few}\, \times10^{9}-10^{10}\,M_{\sun}$), which
|
|
are of particular interest in examining the black hole population but
|
|
for which the number of simulations we have with a given final black
|
|
hole mass drops rapidly.
|
|
|
|
This gives explicitly the modifications to the black hole mass
|
|
compared to that inferred from the ``light bulb'' and
|
|
``constant Eddington ratio'' models which we outline below in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:altmodels}, in which quasars shine at constant luminosity
|
|
or follow exponential light curves, and for which $M_{\rm
|
|
BH}^{f}=M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp) / l$, where $l$, the (constant) Eddington
|
|
ratio, is generally adopted. The corrections are small, and therefore
|
|
most of the black hole mass is accumulated in the bright, near-peak
|
|
quasar phase, in good agreement with observational estimates
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Soltan82,YT02}; we discuss this in greater detail in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:BLqso} and \S~\ref{sec:smbh}. Furthermore, the increase of
|
|
$f_{T}$ with decreasing $\Lp$ implies that lower-mass quasars
|
|
accumulate a larger fraction of their mass in slower, sub-peak
|
|
accretion after the final merger, while high-mass objects acquire
|
|
essentially all their mass in the peak quasar phase. This is seen
|
|
directly in our simulations, and is qualitatively in good agreement
|
|
with expectations from simulations and semi-analytical models in which
|
|
the $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation is set by black hole feedback in a
|
|
strong quasar phase. Compared to the assumption that
|
|
$M_{BH}^{f}=M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)$, this formula introduces a small but
|
|
non-trivial correction in the relic supermassive black hole mass
|
|
function implied by the quasar luminosity function and $\nLp$ (see
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:smbh}).
|
|
|
|
The predictions of our model for the quasar lifetime and evolution can
|
|
be applied to observations which attempt to constrain the quasar
|
|
lifetime from individual quasars, for example using the proximity
|
|
effect in the Ly$\alpha$ forest \citep{BDO88,HC02,Jakobsen03,YL05} and
|
|
multi-epoch observations \citep{MartiniSchneider03}. However, many
|
|
observations designed to constrain the quasar lifetime do so not for
|
|
individual quasars, but using demographic or integral arguments based
|
|
on the population of quasars in some luminosity interval
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Soltan82,HNR98,YT02,YL04,PMN04,Grazian04}. Our
|
|
prediction for these observations is similar but slightly more
|
|
complex, as an observed luminosity function at a given luminosity will
|
|
consist of sources with different peak luminosities $\Lp$, but the
|
|
same instantaneous luminosity, $L$. Furthermore, the lifetime being
|
|
probed may be either the integrated quasar lifetime above some
|
|
luminosity threshold or the differential lifetime at a particular
|
|
luminosity.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f7.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f7.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted distribution (fractional number density
|
|
per logarithmic interval in lifetime) of quasar lifetimes at
|
|
different bolometric luminosities, for the luminosity function
|
|
determined in \S~\ref{sec:LF} at $z=0.5$. Left panel plots the distribution of
|
|
integrated lifetimes $t_{Q}$ (time spent over the course of each
|
|
quasar lifetime above the given luminosity). Right panel plots
|
|
the distribution of differential lifetimes $\dtdL$ (time spent
|
|
by each quasar in a logarithmic interval about the given luminosity).
|
|
\label{fig:LF.lifetimes}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
For a given determination of the quasar luminosity function using our
|
|
model for quasar lifetimes and some distribution of peak luminosities,
|
|
we can predict the distribution of quasar lifetimes as a function of
|
|
the observed luminosity interval. Figure~\ref{fig:LF.lifetimes} shows
|
|
an example of such a result, using the determination of the luminosity
|
|
function below in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}, at redshift $z=0.5$. We
|
|
consider several bolometric luminosities spanning the luminosity
|
|
function from $10^{9}-10^{14}\,L_{\sun}$, and for each, the
|
|
distribution of sources (peak luminosities), and the corresponding
|
|
distribution of quasar lifetimes. We show both the distribution of
|
|
integrated quasar lifetimes $t_{Q}$ (left panel) and the distribution
|
|
of differential quasar lifetimes $\dtdL$ (right panel). The evolution
|
|
with redshift is weak, with the lifetime increasing by $\sim1.5-2$ at
|
|
a given luminosity at $z=2$. There is furthermore an ambiguity of a
|
|
factor $\sim2$, as some of the quasars observed at a given luminosity
|
|
will only be entering a peak quasar phase, whereas the lifetimes shown
|
|
are integrated over the whole quasar evolution. This prediction is
|
|
quite different from that of the optical quasar phase which we
|
|
describe below in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso} and in \citet{H05a}, as it
|
|
considers only the intrinsic bolometric luminosity, but our modeling
|
|
and the fits provided above for the bolometric lifetime and column
|
|
density distributions should enable the prediction of these
|
|
quantities, considering attenuation, in any waveband. In either case,
|
|
it is clear that the lifetime distribution for lower-luminosity
|
|
quasars is increasingly more strongly peaked and centered around
|
|
longer lifetimes, in good agreement with the limited observational
|
|
evidence from e.g.\ Adelberger \& Steidel (2005). This is a
|
|
consequence of the fact that in our model quasar lifetimes
|
|
decrease with increasing luminosity. The range spanned in the figure
|
|
corresponds well to the range of quasar lifetimes implied by the
|
|
observations above and others \citep[e.g.][and references
|
|
therein]{Martini04}.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Alternative Models of Quasar Evolution}
|
|
\label{sec:altmodels}
|
|
|
|
Our modeling reproduces at least the observed hard X-ray quasar
|
|
luminosity function by construction, since we use the observed quasar
|
|
luminosity functions to determine the birthrate of quasars of a given
|
|
$\Lp$, $\nLp$, in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}. It is therefore useful to
|
|
consider in detail the differences in our subsequent predictions
|
|
between various models for the quasar lifetime and obscuration, in
|
|
order to determine to what extent these predictions are implied by any
|
|
model that successfully reproduces the observed quasar luminosity
|
|
function, and to what extent they are independent of the observed
|
|
luminosity functions and instead depend on the model of quasar
|
|
evolution adopted. To this end, we define two models for the
|
|
quasar lifetime, and two models for the distribution of quasar column
|
|
densities, combinations of which have been commonly used in most
|
|
previous analyses of quasars.
|
|
|
|
For the quasar lifetime, we consider the following two cases:
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
{\em ``Light-Bulb Model''} \citep[e.g.,][]{SB92,KH00,WL03,HQB04}. The
|
|
simplest possible model for the quasar light curve, the ``feast or
|
|
famine'' or ``light-bulb'' model assumes that quasars have only two
|
|
states, ``on'' and ``off.'' Quasars turn ``on'', shine at a fixed
|
|
bolometric luminosity $L=\Lp$, defined by a ``constant'' Eddington
|
|
ratio (i.e.\ $\Lp=l\, M_{\rm BH}^{f}$) and constant quasar lifetime
|
|
$t_{Q,\,\rm LB}$. Models where quasars live arbitrarily long with
|
|
slowly evolving mean volume emissivity or mean light curve
|
|
\citep[e.g.][]{SB92,HM00,KH00} are equivalent to the ``light bulb''
|
|
scenario, as they still assume that quasars observed at a luminosity
|
|
$L$ radiate at that approximately constant luminosity over some
|
|
universal lifetime $t_{Q,\,\rm LB}$ at a particular redshift. We
|
|
adopt $l=0.3$ and $t_{Q,\, \rm LB}=10^{7}\,$yr, as is commonly assumed
|
|
in theoretical work and suggested by observations (given this
|
|
prior) \citep[e.g.][]{YT02,Martini04, Soltan82,YL04,PMN04,Grazian04},
|
|
and similar to the $e$-folding time of a black hole with canonical
|
|
radiative efficiency $\epsilon_{r}=0.1$ \citep{Salpeter64} or the
|
|
dynamical time in a typical galactic disk or central regions of the
|
|
merger. These choices control only the normalization of $\nLp$, and
|
|
therefore do not affect most of our predictions. Where the
|
|
normalization (i.e.\ value of the constant $t_{Q}$ or $l$) is
|
|
important, we allow it to vary in order to produce the best possible
|
|
fit to the observations.
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
{\em ``Exponential (Fixed Eddington Ratio) Model.''} A somewhat more
|
|
physical model of the quasar light curve is obtained by assuming
|
|
growth at a constant Eddington ratio, as is commonly adopted in e.g.\
|
|
semi-analytical models which attempt to reproduce quasar luminosity
|
|
functions \citep[e.g.][]{KH00,WL03,V03}. In this model, a black hole
|
|
accretes at a fixed Eddington ratio $\eEdd$ from an initial mass
|
|
$M_{i}$ to a final mass $M_{f}$ (or equivalently, a final luminosity
|
|
$L_{f}=\eEdd\,L_{Edd}(M_{f})$), and then shuts off. This gives
|
|
exponential mass and luminosity growth, and the time spent in any
|
|
logarithmic luminosity bin is constant,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
dt/\dlgL = t_{S}\,(\ln(10)/\eEdd)
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
for $L_{i}<L<L_{f}$. This is true for any exponential light curve;
|
|
i.e.\ this model includes cases with an exponential {\em decline} in
|
|
quasar luminosity), $f(t)\propto e^{\pm t/t_{\ast}}$, such as that of
|
|
\citet{HL98}, with only the normalization $dt/\dlgL =
|
|
t_{\ast}\,\ln(10)$ changed, and thus any such model will give
|
|
identical results with correspondingly different normalizations. As
|
|
with the ``light-bulb'' model, we are free to choose the
|
|
characteristic Eddington ratio and corresponding timescale for this
|
|
lightcurve, and we adopt $\eEdd=0.3$ (i.e.\ $t_{\ast}\sim10^{8}\,$yr)
|
|
in general. Again, however, we allow the normalization to vary freely
|
|
where it is important, such that these models have the best chance to
|
|
reproduce the observations. For our purposes, models in which this
|
|
timescale is determined by e.g.\ the galaxy dynamical time and thus
|
|
are somewhat dependent on host galaxy mass or redshift are nearly
|
|
identical to this scenario. Further, insofar as the dynamical time
|
|
increases weakly with increasing host galaxy mass (as, e.g.\ for a
|
|
spheroid with $M_{\rm BH}\propto M_{\rm vir}\sim a\,\sigma^{2}/G$,
|
|
where $a$ is the spheroid scale length and $M_{\rm BH}\propto
|
|
\sigma^{4}$, such that $t_{\rm dyn}\sim a/\sigma\propto \sigma \propto
|
|
M_{\rm vir}^{1/4}$), this produces behavior qualitatively opposite to
|
|
our predictions (of increasing lifetime with decreasing instantaneous
|
|
luminosity), and yields results which are even more discrepant from
|
|
our predictions and the observations than the constant (host-galaxy
|
|
independent) case.
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
A wide variety of ``light-bulb'' or exponential (constant Eddington
|
|
ratio) models are possible, allowing for different distributions of
|
|
typical Eddington ratios and/or quasar lifetimes (see e.g.\ Steed \&
|
|
Weinberg 2003 for an extensive comparison of several classes of such
|
|
models), but for our purposes they are essentially identical insofar
|
|
as they do not capture the essential qualitative features of our
|
|
quasar lifetimes, namely that the quasar lifetime depends on both
|
|
instantaneous and peak luminosities, and increases with decreasing
|
|
instantaneous luminosity.
|
|
|
|
We fit both of the simple models above to the
|
|
observed quasar luminosity functions in the same manner described in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:LF}, (i.e.\ in the same manner as we fit our more
|
|
complicated models of quasar evolution), to determine $\nLp_{\rm LB}$
|
|
for the ``light-bulb'' model and $\nLp_{\rm Edd}$ for the ``fixed
|
|
Eddington ratio'' model (see Equations~\ref{eqn:nLp.LB} and
|
|
\ref{eqn:nLp.Edd}, respectively).
|
|
%We use the observed hard X-ray luminosity function in order to minimize uncertainties owing to
|
|
%attenuation, converted to a bolometric luminosity function as above.
|
|
Thus all three models of the quasar light curve, the ``light-bulb'', ``fixed Eddington ratio'',
|
|
and our luminosity-dependent lifetimes model produce an essentially identical
|
|
bolometric luminosity function.
|
|
|
|
We also consider two commonly adopted alternative models for the
|
|
column density distribution and quasar obscuration:
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
{\em ``Standard (Luminosity-Independent) Torus''}
|
|
\citep[e.g.][]{Antonucci93}. This is the canonical obscuration model,
|
|
based on observations of local, low-luminosity Seyfert galaxies
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{RMS99}. The column density distribution is derived
|
|
from the torus geometry, where we assume the torus inner radius lies
|
|
at a distance $R_{\rm T}$ from the black hole, with a height $H_{\rm
|
|
T}$, and a density distribution $\rho(\theta)\propto\exp(-\gamma
|
|
|\cos\theta |)$, where $\theta$ is the polar angle and the torus lies
|
|
in the $\theta=0$ plane. This results in a column density as a
|
|
function of viewing angle of
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
%\begin{split}
|
|
%\nh(\theta)= &N_{\rm H,\, 0}\,\exp(-\gamma |\cos\theta |)\,\cos(90-\theta)\,\\
|
|
%&\times\sqrt{\Bigl(\frac{R_{\rm T}}{H_{\rm T}}\Bigr)^{2} - \sec^{2}(90-\theta)
|
|
%\Bigl(\Bigl(\frac{R_{\rm T}}{H_{\rm T}}\Bigr)^{2}-1\Bigr)}
|
|
%\end{split}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
\nh(\theta)&=&N_{\rm H,\, 0}\,\exp(-\gamma |\cos\theta |)\,\cos(90-\theta)\,\nonumber\\
|
|
&&\times\sqrt{\Bigl(\frac{R_{\rm T}}{H_{\rm T}}\Bigr)^{2} - \sec^{2}(90-\theta)
|
|
\Bigl(\Bigl(\frac{R_{\rm T}}{H_{\rm T}}\Bigr)^{2}-1\Bigr)}
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
\citep{Treister04}. Here, $N_{\rm H,\, 0}$ is the column density along
|
|
a line of sight through the torus in the equatorial plane and $\gamma$
|
|
parameterizes the exponential decay of density with viewing
|
|
angle. This is a phenomenological model, and as a result the
|
|
parameters are essentially all free. We adopt typical values, an
|
|
equatorial column density $N_{\rm H,\, 0}=10^{24}$\,cm$^{-2}$,
|
|
radius-to-height ratio $R_{\rm T}/H_{\rm T}=1.1$, and density profile
|
|
$\gamma=4$. This combination of parameters follows \citet{Treister04},
|
|
and is designed to fit the observed X-ray column density distribution
|
|
and give a ratio of obscured to unobscured quasars $\sim3$, similar to
|
|
the mean locally observed value \citep[e.g.][]{RMS99}.
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
{\em ``Receding (Luminosity-Dependent) Torus''}
|
|
\citep[e.g.][]{Lawrence91}. Many observations suggest that the
|
|
fraction of obscured objects depends on luminosity
|
|
\citep{Steffen03,Ueda03,Hasinger04,GRW04,sazrev04,Barger05,Simpson05}.
|
|
Therefore, some theoretical works have adopted a ``receding torus''
|
|
model, in which the torus radius $R_{\rm T}$ (i.e.\ distance from the
|
|
quasar) is allowed to vary with luminosity, but the height and other
|
|
parameters remain constant. The torus radius is assumed to increase
|
|
with luminosity, enlarging the opening angle and thus the fraction of
|
|
unobscured quasars. In this case, the column densities are identical
|
|
to those shown above, but now $R_{\rm T}/H_{\rm T}=(L/L_{0})^{0.5}$,
|
|
where $L_{0}\approx10^{11}\,L_{\sun}$ is the luminosity at which the
|
|
ratio of obscured to unobscured quasars is $\approx 3:1$ and the
|
|
power-law slope is chosen to fit the dependence of obscured fraction
|
|
on luminosity.
|
|
|
|
\bigskip
|
|
|
|
Both of these column density distributions represent phenomenological
|
|
models with several free parameters, explicitly chosen to reproduce
|
|
the observed differences in quasar luminosity functions and column
|
|
density distributions. Despite this, it is not clear that these
|
|
functional forms represent the best possible fit to the observations
|
|
they are designed to reproduce. Furthermore, comparison of our results
|
|
in which column density distributions depend on luminosity and peak
|
|
luminosity elucidates the importance of proper modeling of the
|
|
dependence of column density on quasar evolution.
|
|
|
|
\section{The Quasar Luminosity Function}
|
|
\label{sec:LF}
|
|
\subsection{The Effect of Luminosity-Dependent Quasar Lifetimes}
|
|
\label{sec:lifetimeLF}
|
|
|
|
Given quasar lifetimes as functions of both instantaneous and peak
|
|
luminosities, the observed quasar luminosity function (in the absence
|
|
of selection effects) is a convolution of the lifetime with the
|
|
intrinsic distribution of sources with a given $\Lp$. If sources of a
|
|
given $L$ are created at a rate $\dot{n}(L,t)$ (per unit comoving
|
|
volume) at cosmological time $t_{H}\sim1/H(z)$ and live for some
|
|
lifetime $\Delta t_{Q}(L)$, the total comoving number density observed
|
|
will be
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\Delta n=\int^{t_{H}+\Delta t_{Q}(L)}_{t_{H}} \dot{n}(L,t)\,{\rm d}t,
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
which, for a cosmologically evolving $\dot{n}(L, t)$, can be expanded
|
|
about $\dot{n}(L,t_{H})$, yielding $\Delta n=\dot{n}(L,t_{H})\,\Delta
|
|
t_{Q}(L)$ to first order in $\Delta t_{Q}(L)/t_{H}$. Considering a
|
|
complete distribution of sources with some $\Lp$, we similarly obtain
|
|
the luminosity function
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\phi(L)\equiv\fdphi(L)=\int{\frac{{\rm d}t(L,L_{\rm
|
|
peak})}{\dlgL}\,\nLP}\,{\rm d}\log(L_{\rm peak}).
|
|
\label{eqn:LF.int}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Throughout, we will denote the differential luminosity function, i.e.\
|
|
the comoving number density of quasars in some logarithmic luminosity
|
|
interval, as $\phi\equiv\dphi$. Here, $\nLP$ is the comoving number
|
|
density of sources created per unit cosmological time per logarithmic
|
|
interval in $L_{\rm peak}$, at some redshift, and $\dtdL$ is the
|
|
differential quasar lifetime, i.e.\ the total time that a quasar with a given
|
|
$\Lp$ spends in a logarithmic interval in bolometric luminosity $L$.
|
|
This formulation
|
|
implicitly accounts for the ``duty cycle'' (the fraction of active
|
|
quasars at a given time), which is proportional to the lifetime at a
|
|
given luminosity. Corrections to this formula owing to finite
|
|
lifetimes are of order $(\dtdL)/t_{H}$, which for the luminosities and
|
|
redshifts considered here (except for Figure~\ref{fig:LF.highz}), are
|
|
never larger than $\sim1/5$ and are generally $\ll 1$, which is
|
|
significantly smaller than the uncertainty in the luminosity
|
|
function itself.
|
|
|
|
We next consider the implications of our
|
|
luminosity-dependent quasar lifetimes for the relation between the
|
|
observed luminosity function and the distribution of peak luminosities
|
|
(i.e.\ intrinsic properties of quasar systems). In traditional
|
|
models of quasar lifetimes and light curves, this relation is
|
|
trivial. For example, models in which quasars ``turn on''
|
|
at fixed luminosity for some fixed lifetime (i.e.\ the ``light-bulb'' model
|
|
defined in \S~\ref{sec:altmodels}) imply
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nLP_{\rm LB} \propto \phi(L=L_{\rm peak}),
|
|
\label{eqn:nLp.LB}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
and models in which quasar light curves are a pure exponential growth
|
|
or decay with some cutoff(s) (e.g., exponential or fixed Eddington-ratio models) imply
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nLP_{\rm Edd} \propto \frac{d\phi}{\dlgL}\raisebox{-3pt}{\huge $\mid$}_{L=L_{\rm peak}}.
|
|
\label{eqn:nLp.Edd}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
These both have essentially {\em identical} shape to the observed
|
|
luminosity function, qualitatively different from our model prediction
|
|
that $\nLp$ should turn over at luminosities approximately below the
|
|
break in the observed luminosity function (see, e.g. Fig. 1 of
|
|
Hopkins et al.\ 2005e). The
|
|
luminosity-dependent quasar lifetimes determined from our simulations
|
|
imply a new interpretation of the luminosity function,
|
|
with $\nLP$ tracing the bright end of the luminosity function similar
|
|
to traditional models, but then peaking and turning over below
|
|
$\Lp\sim L_{\rm break}$, the break luminosity in standard double
|
|
power-law luminosity functions. In our deconvolution of the luminosity
|
|
function, the faint end corresponds primarily to sources in
|
|
sub-Eddington phases transitioning into or out of the phase(s) of peak
|
|
quasar activity. There is also some contribution to the faint-end
|
|
lifetime from quasars accreting efficiently (i.e.\ growing
|
|
exponentially at high Eddington ratio) early in their activity and on
|
|
their way to becoming brighter sources, but this becomes an
|
|
increasingly small fraction of the lifetime at lower luminosities. For
|
|
example, in Figure 7 of Hopkins et al.\ (2005b), direct calculation of
|
|
the quasar lifetime shows that sub-Eddington phases begin to dominate
|
|
the lifetime for $L\lesssim0.1\,\Lp$, with $\gtrsim90\%$ of the
|
|
lifetime at $L\sim10^{-3}\,\Lp$ corresponding to sub-Eddington
|
|
growth. By definition, a ``fixed Eddington ratio'' or ``light bulb''
|
|
model is dominated at all luminosities by a fixed, usually large,
|
|
Eddington ratio. Even models which assume an exponential decline in
|
|
the quasar luminosity from some peak, although they clearly must spend
|
|
a significant amount of time at low Eddington ratios, have an
|
|
identical $\nLp=\nLp_{\rm Edd}$ (modulo an arbitrary normalization),
|
|
and predict far less time at most observable ($\gtrsim10^{-4}\,\Lp$)
|
|
low luminosities and accretion rates (because the accretion
|
|
rates fall off so rapidly); i.e.\ the population at any observed
|
|
luminosity is still dominated by objects near their peak.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f8.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f8.ps}
|
|
\caption{We reproduce (thin histogram) the luminosity function of
|
|
\citet{Ueda03} at redshift $z=0.5$ (thin curve) using the binned
|
|
differential quasar lifetime $\dtdL$ directly from our simulations
|
|
and a fitted distribution of peak luminosities $\nLp$ (thick
|
|
histogram). For each bin in $\log(\Lp)$, we average the binned
|
|
differential lifetime of a set of simulations with peak luminosity
|
|
in the bin. This clearly demonstrates our key qualitative result,
|
|
that the faint end of the luminosity function is
|
|
reproduced by quasars with {\em peak} luminosity
|
|
around the break luminosity but observed primarily in sub-Eddington
|
|
states (luminosities $L\ll\Lp$), is not an
|
|
artifact of our fitting formulae or extrapolation to extreme
|
|
luminosities.
|
|
\label{fig:LF.hists}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
From our new, large set of simulations, we test this model of the
|
|
relationship between the distribution of peak quasar luminosities and
|
|
observed luminosity functions, namely our assertion that $\nLp$
|
|
should peak around the observed break in the luminosity function, and
|
|
turn over below this peak, with the observed luminosity function
|
|
faint-end slope dominated by sources with peak luminosities near the
|
|
break in sub-Eddington (sub-peak luminosity) states. In particular, we
|
|
wish to ensure that this behavior for $\nLP$ is real, and not some
|
|
artifact of our fitting functions for the quasar lifetime.
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:LF.hists} shows the best fit $\nLP$ distribution
|
|
(solid thick histogram) fitted to the \citet{Ueda03} hard X-ray quasar
|
|
luminosity function (solid curve) at redshift $z=0.5$, as well as the
|
|
resulting best-fit luminosity function (solid thin histogram). For
|
|
ease of comparison with other quasar luminosities, we rescale the
|
|
luminosity function to the bolometric luminosity using the corrections
|
|
of \citet{Marconi04}. We determine $\nLP$ by logarithmically binning
|
|
the range of $\Lp$, and considering for each bin all simulations with
|
|
$\Lp$ in the given range. For each bin, then, we take the average
|
|
binned time the simulations spend in each luminosity interval, and
|
|
take that to be the quasar lifetime $\dtdL$. We then fit to the
|
|
observed luminosity function of \citet{Ueda03}, fitting
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\phi(L)\approx \sum_{i}\ \dot{n}_{i}(L_{{\rm peak},\, i})\, {\left \langle{\frac
|
|
{\Delta t(L,\,L_{{\rm peak},\, i})}{\Delta \log L}}\right \rangle}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
and allowing $\dot{n}_{i}(L_{{\rm peak},\, i})$ to be a free
|
|
coefficient for each binned $\Lp=L_{{\rm peak},\, i}$. Despite our
|
|
large number of simulations, the numerical binning process makes this
|
|
result noisy, especially at the extreme ends of the
|
|
luminosity function. However, the relevant result is clear -- the
|
|
qualitative behavior of $\nLP$ described above is unchanged. For
|
|
further discussion of the qualitative differences between the $\nLP$
|
|
distribution from different quasar models, and the robust nature of
|
|
our interpretation even under restrictive assumptions (e.g.\ ignoring
|
|
the early phases of merger activity or applying various models for
|
|
radiative efficiency as a function of accretion rate), we refer to
|
|
\citet{H05c}.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Luminosity Function at Different Frequencies and Redshifts}
|
|
\label{sec:fullLF}
|
|
|
|
Given a distribution of peak luminosities $\nLP$, we can use our model
|
|
of quasar lifetimes and the column density distribution as a function
|
|
of instantaneous and peak luminosities to predict the luminosity
|
|
function at any frequency. From a distribution of \NH\ values and some
|
|
a priori known minimum observed luminosity $L_{\nu}^{\rm min}$, the
|
|
fraction $f_{\rm obs}$ of quasars with a peak luminosity $L_{\rm
|
|
peak}$ and instantaneous bolometric luminosity $L$ which lie above the
|
|
luminosity threshold is given by the fraction of \NH\ values below a
|
|
critical $N_{H}^{\rm max}$, where $L_{\nu}^{\rm
|
|
min}=f_{\nu}L\,\exp{(-\sigma_{\nu}N_{H}^{\rm max})}$. Here,
|
|
$f_{\nu}(L)\equiv L_{\nu}/L$ is a bolometric correction and
|
|
$\sigma_{\nu}$ is the cross-section at frequency $\nu$. Thus,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
N_{H}^{\rm max}(\nu,L,L_{\nu}^{\rm min})=\frac{1}{\sigma_{\nu}}\ln{\Bigl( \frac{f_{\nu}(L)L}{L_{\nu}^{\rm min}}\Bigr)},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
and for the lognormal distribution above,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
%f_{\rm obs}(\nu,L,L_{\rm peak})=\frac{1}{2} \Bigl[ 1 + {\rm erf}\Bigl( \frac{\log{(N_{H}^{\rm max}(\nu,L)/\meanNH(L,L_{\rm peak}))}}{\sqrt{2}\,\sigNH(L,L_{\rm peak})}\Bigr)\Bigr].
|
|
f_{\rm obs}(\nu,L,L_{\rm peak},L_{\nu}^{\rm min})=\frac{1}{2} \Bigl[ 1 + {\rm erf}\Bigl( \frac{\log{(N_{H}^{\rm max}/\meanNH)}}{\sqrt{2}\,\sigNH}\Bigr)\Bigr].
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
This results in a luminosity function (in terms of the bolometric luminosity)
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
% \begin{split}
|
|
% \phi(\nu,L,L_{\nu}^{\rm min})& =\int{f_{\rm obs}(\nu,L,L_{\rm peak},L_{\nu}^{\rm min})} \\
|
|
% &\quad \times\frac{dt(L, L_{\rm peak})}{\dlgL}\,\nLP\,d\log(L_{\rm peak}),
|
|
% \label{eqn:phifull}
|
|
% \end{split}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
\phi(\nu,L,L_{\nu}^{\rm min})&=&\int{f_{\rm obs}(\nu,L,L_{\rm peak},L_{\nu}^{\rm min})} \nonumber\\
|
|
&&\quad \times\frac{dt(L, L_{\rm peak})}{\dlgL}\,\nLP\,d\log(L_{\rm peak}),
|
|
\label{eqn:phifull}
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
where $\phi(\nu,L,L_{\nu}^{\rm min})$ is the number density of sources with
|
|
bolometric luminosity $L$ per logarithmic interval in $L$, with an observed luminosity
|
|
at frequency $\nu$ above $L_{\nu}^{\rm min}$.
|
|
|
|
Based on the direct fit for $\nLP$ in Figure~\ref{fig:LF.hists}, we wish to
|
|
consider a functional form for $\nLP$ with a well-defined peak and
|
|
falloff in either direction in $\log(\Lp)$. Therefore, we take $\nLP$ to be a
|
|
lognormal distribution, with
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nLP=\nstar\ \frac{1}{\sstar\sqrt{2\pi}}\exp\Bigl[ -\frac{1}{2}\,\Bigl( \frac{\log(\Lp/\lstar)}{\sstar}\Bigr)^{2}\Bigr].
|
|
\label{eqn:nLp.lognorm}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Here, $\nstar$ is the total number of quasars being created
|
|
or activated per unit comoving volume per unit time; $\lstar$ is the
|
|
center of the lognormal, the characteristic peak luminosity of quasars
|
|
being born (i.e.\ the peak luminosity at which $\nLP$ itself peaks),
|
|
which is directly related to the break luminosity in the observed
|
|
luminosity function; and $\sstar$ is the width of the lognormal in
|
|
$\nLp$, and determines the slope of the bright end of the luminosity
|
|
function. Since our model predicts that the bright end of the
|
|
luminosity function is made up primarily of sources at high Eddington
|
|
ratio near their peak luminosity, i.e.\ essentially identical to
|
|
``light-bulb'' or ``fixed Eddington ratio'' models, the bright-end
|
|
slope is a fitted quantity, determined by whatever physical processes
|
|
regulate the bright-end slope of the active black hole mass function
|
|
(possibly feedback from outflows or threshold cooling processes, e.g.\
|
|
Wyithe \& Loeb 2003; Scannapieco \& Oh 2004; Dekel \& Birnboim 2004),
|
|
unlike the faint-end slope which is a consequence of the quasar
|
|
lifetime itself, and is only weakly dependent on the underlying faint-end
|
|
active black hole mass or $\nLp$ distribution.
|
|
|
|
We note that although
|
|
this choice of fitting function has appropriate general qualities, it
|
|
is ultimately somewhat arbitrary, and we choose it primarily for
|
|
its simplicity and its capacity to match the data with a minimum of
|
|
free parameters. We could instead, for example, have chosen a double
|
|
power-law form with $\nLP =
|
|
\nstar/[(\Lp/\lstar)^{\gamma_{1}}+(\Lp/\lstar)^{\gamma_{2}}]$ and
|
|
$\gamma_{1}<\gamma_{2}$, but given that the entire faint end of the
|
|
luminosity function is dominated by objects with $\Lp\sim\lstar$, the
|
|
observed luminosity function has essentially no power to constrain the
|
|
faint end slope $\gamma_{1}$, other than setting an upper limit
|
|
$\gamma_{1}\lesssim0$. The ``true'' $\nLP$ will, of course, be a
|
|
complicated function of both halo merger rates at a given redshift and
|
|
the distribution of host galaxy properties including, but not
|
|
necessarily limited to, masses, concentrations, and gas fractions.
|
|
|
|
Having chosen a form for $\nLP$, we can then fit to an observed
|
|
luminosity function to determine $(\nstar,\,\lstar,\,\sstar)$. We take
|
|
advantage of the capability of our model to predict the luminosity
|
|
function at multiple frequencies, and consider both fits to just the
|
|
\citet{Ueda03} hard X-ray (2-10 keV) luminosity function, $\phi_{HX}$,
|
|
and fits to the \citet{Ueda03}, \citet{Miyaji01} soft X-ray (0.5-2
|
|
keV; $\phi_{SX}$), and \citet{Croom04} optical B-band (4400 \AA;
|
|
$\phi_{B}$) luminosity functions {\em simultaneously}. These
|
|
observations agree with other, more recent determinations of
|
|
$\phi_{HX},\ \phi_{SX},\ \phi_{B}$
|
|
\citep[e.g.][respectively]{Barger05,HMS05,Richards05} at most
|
|
luminosities, and therefore we do not expect revisions to the observed
|
|
luminosity functions to dramatically change our results. In order to
|
|
avoid numerical artifacts from fitting to extrapolated,
|
|
low-luminosity slopes in the analytical forms of these luminosity
|
|
functions, we directly fit to the binned luminosity function
|
|
data. Thus, we fit each luminosity function in all redshift intervals
|
|
for which we have binned data.
|
|
|
|
We find good fits ($\reducechi=68.8/104\approx0.66$) to all luminosity functions at all redshifts
|
|
with a pure peak-luminosity evolution (PPLE) model, for
|
|
which
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\lstar=\lstar^{0}\,\exp({k_{L}\,\tau}),\ \nstar=constant,\ \sstar=constant,
|
|
\label{eqn:param.evol}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $\tau$ is the fractional lookback time ($\tau\equiv H_{0}\int^{z}_{0} dt$) and
|
|
$k_{L}$ is a dimensionless constant fitted with $\lstar,\,\nstar,\,\sstar$.
|
|
It is important to
|
|
distinguish this from ``standard'' pure luminosity evolution (PLE)
|
|
models \citep[e.g.,][]{Boyle88}, as with $\nLP>0$ and
|
|
$\lstar=\lstar(z)$ always, the density of sources, especially as a
|
|
function of observed luminosity at some frequency, evolves in a
|
|
non-trivial manner.
|
|
|
|
We do not find significant improvement in the fits
|
|
if we additionally allow $\nstar$ or $\sstar$ to evolve with redshift
|
|
($\Delta\chi^{2}\sim1-2$, depending on the adopted form for the evolution),
|
|
and therefore consider only the simplest parameterization above (Equation~\ref{eqn:param.evol}).
|
|
We also find acceptable fits for a pure density evolution model, with
|
|
$\lstar=$\,constant and $\nstar=\nstar^{0}\,\exp{(k_{N}\,\tau)}$ (both
|
|
keeping $\sstar$ fixed and allowing it to evolve as well).
|
|
%The best-fit values in this case are
|
|
%$(\log\nstar,k_{S},\,\log\lstar,\,\sstar)=
|
|
%(-6.11,\,5.17,\,8.80,\,1.25)$ with
|
|
%errors $(0.39,0.45,0.68,0.10)$.
|
|
However, the fits are somewhat poorer ($\reducechi\approx1$), and the resulting
|
|
parameters over-produce the present-day density of low-mass supermassive
|
|
black holes and the intensity of the X-ray background by an order of
|
|
magnitude, so we do not consider them further. In either case, there is a
|
|
considerable degeneracy between the parameters $\sstar$ and $\lstar$,
|
|
where a decrease in $\lstar$ can be compensated by a corresponding
|
|
increase in $\sstar$. This degeneracy is present
|
|
because, as indicated above, the observed luminosity function only
|
|
weakly constrains the faint-end slope of $\nLP$.
|
|
|
|
The observations shown are insufficient at high redshift to strongly
|
|
resolve the ``turnover'' in the total comoving quasar density at
|
|
$z\sim2-3$, and thus we acknowledge that there must be corrections to
|
|
this fitted evolution at higher redshift, which we address
|
|
below. However, as we primarily consider low redshifts, $z
|
|
\lesssim 3$,
|
|
and show that
|
|
the supermassive black hole population and X-ray background are
|
|
dominated by quasars at redshifts for which our $\nLp$ distribution is
|
|
well determined, this is not a significant source of error in most of
|
|
our calculations even if we extrapolate our evolution to $z\gg3$.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f9.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f9.ps}
|
|
\caption{Best-fit luminosity function from the pure
|
|
peak-luminosity evolution $\nLp$ distribution, for redshifts
|
|
$z=0-3$. From our fitted lognormal $\nLP$ distribution, we
|
|
simultaneously reproduce the luminosity function in the hard X-ray
|
|
(2-10 keV; solid black line), soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV; dashed red
|
|
line), and optical B-band (4400 \AA; dotted blue line) at all
|
|
redshifts. Moreover, we reproduce the distribution of broad-line
|
|
quasars in hard X-ray selected samples (cyan dot-dashed line), as
|
|
described in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}. All quantities have been rescaled to
|
|
bolometric luminosities for ease of comparison, using the
|
|
corrections of \citet{Marconi04}, with the plotted error bars
|
|
representing both quoted measurement errors and the estimated
|
|
errors in the bolometric corrections. The observations are from
|
|
\citet{Miyaji01} (soft X-ray; red squares), \citet{Ueda03} (hard
|
|
X-ray; black circles), \citet{Croom04} (B-band, blue diamonds),
|
|
and \citet{Barger05} (X-ray selected broad-line quasars; cyan
|
|
crosses).
|
|
\label{fig:LF.all}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:LF.all} shows the resulting best-fit PPLE luminosity
|
|
functions from the best-fit $\nLP$ distribution, for redshifts
|
|
$z=0-3$. This has the best-fit ($\reducechi=0.67$) values
|
|
$(\log\lstar,k_{L},\,\log\nstar,\,\sstar)=
|
|
(9.94,\,5.61,\,-6.29,\,0.91)$
|
|
% (10.19,\,4.91,\,-6.43,\,0.91)$
|
|
with corresponding errors $(0.29,0.28,0.13,0.09)$.
|
|
%$(0.48,0.36,0.28,0.09)$.
|
|
Here, $\lstar$ is in solar luminosities and
|
|
$\nstar$ in comoving ${\rm Mpc^{-3}\,Myr^{-1}}$. Fitting to the hard
|
|
X-ray data alone gives a similar fit, with the slightly different
|
|
values $(\log\lstar,k_{L},\,\log\nstar,\,\sstar)=
|
|
(9.54,\,4.90,\,-5.86,\,1.03) \pm (0.66,0.43,0.37,0.13)$,
|
|
$\reducechi=0.7$ (note the degeneracy between $\lstar$ and $\sstar$ in
|
|
the two fits). Our best-fit value of $k_{L}=5.6$ compares favorably to
|
|
the value $\sim6$ found by e.g.\ Boyle et al.\ (2000) and Croom et
|
|
al. (2004) for the evolution of the break luminosity in the observed
|
|
luminosity function, demonstrating that the break luminosity traces
|
|
the {\em peak} in the $\nLp$ distribution at all redshifts. These fits
|
|
and the errors were obtained by least-squares minimization over all
|
|
data points (comparing each to the predicted curve at its redshift and
|
|
luminosity), assuming the functional form we have adopted for $\nLP$.
|
|
|
|
The agreement we obtain at all redshifts, in each of
|
|
the hard X-ray (black solid line), soft X-ray (red dashed line), and
|
|
B-band (dark blue dotted line) is good. This is not at all guaranteed
|
|
by our procedure, as the fit is highly over-constrained, because we
|
|
fit three luminosity functions each at five redshifts to only four
|
|
free parameters. Of course, the choice of the functional form for $\nLp$
|
|
ensures that we should be able to reproduce at least one luminosity
|
|
function and its evolution (e.g.\ the hard X-ray luminosity function,
|
|
which is least affected by attenuation), but our modeling of the
|
|
column density distributions in mergers allows us to simultaneously
|
|
reproduce the luminosity functions in different wavebands without
|
|
imposing assumptions about obscured fractions or sources of
|
|
attenuation. Expressed as bolometric luminosity functions, $\phi_{B}$,
|
|
$\phi_{SX}$, and $\phi_{HX}$ would be identical in the absence of
|
|
obscuration, similar to the predicted $\phi_{HX}$ as obscuration is
|
|
minimal in the hard X-ray.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f10.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f10.ps}
|
|
\caption{Hard X-ray (thick), soft X-ray (thin), and B-band
|
|
(dot-dash) LFs determined from our model of quasar lifetimes and
|
|
column densities, based on a distribution of intrinsic source
|
|
properties fitted to the observed hard X-ray LF
|
|
and the limiting magnitudes of observed samples, at the different
|
|
redshifts shown. All quantities are rescaled to bolometric
|
|
luminosities with the bolometric corrections of \citet{Marconi04}.
|
|
Symbols show the observed LFs for hard X-rays
|
|
\citep[][diamonds]{Ueda03}, soft X-rays
|
|
\citep[][triangles]{Miyaji00}, and B-band
|
|
\citep[][crosses]{Boyle00}. Reproduced from \citet{H05d}.
|
|
\label{fig:LF.lowz}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
For redshifts $z\leq1$, we reproduce in our Figure~\ref{fig:LF.lowz},
|
|
Fig.~2 of \citet{H05d}, which shows in detail the agreement between
|
|
hard X-ray \citep{Ueda03}, soft X-ray \citep{Miyaji00}, and optical
|
|
\citep{Boyle00} luminosity functions resulting from the time and
|
|
luminosity dependent column density distributions derived from the
|
|
simulations. The differential extinction predicted for different
|
|
frequencies (and magnitude limits) of observed samples based on the
|
|
column density distributions in our simulations accounts for the
|
|
different shape of the luminosity function in each band, and the
|
|
evolution of the luminosity function with redshift is driven by a
|
|
changing $\lstar$, the peak of the $\nLp$ distribution
|
|
(Equation~\ref{eqn:param.evol}). We emphasize that in our analysis,
|
|
the key quantity constrained by observations is the fitted $\nLP$
|
|
distribution with redshift. All other quantities and distributions are
|
|
derived from the basic input physics of our simulations, with no
|
|
further assumptions or adjustable factors in our modeling beyond the
|
|
prescription for Bondi (Eddington-limited) accretion and
|
|
$\sim5\%$ energy deposition in the ISM, which are themselves
|
|
constrained by observations and theory as discussed in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:methods} and in Di Matteo et al.\ (2005).
|
|
|
|
We can, of course, fit the previously defined simpler model of quasar
|
|
lifetimes, either a ``light-bulb'' or exponential light curve/fixed
|
|
Eddington ratio model, and obtain an identical hard X-ray luminosity
|
|
function. We determine these fits (see also Equation~\ref{eqn:nLp.LB}
|
|
\& \ref{eqn:nLp.Edd}) and use them throughout when we compare the
|
|
predictions of such models (described in \S~\ref{sec:altmodels}) to
|
|
those of our simulated quasar lifetimes in our subsequent
|
|
analysis. Applying a standard torus model to any model of the
|
|
luminosity function reproduces, by design, the mean offset between the
|
|
B-band and hard X-ray luminosity functions, as the parameters of this
|
|
model are {\it tuned} to reproduce this offset. As many observations
|
|
show, the fraction of broad-line quasars increases with luminosity
|
|
\citep{Steffen03,Ueda03,Hasinger04,sazrev04,Barger05,Simpson05}, and
|
|
so reproducing the relationship between B-band and hard X-ray
|
|
luminosity functions requires adding parameters to the standard torus
|
|
model which allow luminosity-dependent scalings, i.e.\ the class of
|
|
``receding torus'' models. These, again by construction, reproduce the
|
|
distinction between hard X-ray and B-band quasar luminosity functions,
|
|
including the dependence of this difference on luminosity. These are,
|
|
however, phenomenological models designed to fit these
|
|
observations. Our simulations, on the other hand, provide a
|
|
self-consistent description of the column density, which predicts the
|
|
{\em differences} between hard X-ray, soft X-ray, and optical
|
|
luminosity functions without the addition of tunable parameters or
|
|
model features designed to reproduce these observations.
|
|
|
|
Our fits are accurate down to low luminosities, as is clear from our
|
|
prediction for the X-ray luminosity function at bolometric
|
|
luminosities $L\sim\Lcut{9}$. Furthermore, we have calculated the
|
|
predicted $z\lessim0.1$ luminosity function in the B-band as well as
|
|
in H$\alpha$ emission, using the conversion between the two from
|
|
\citet{Hao05} and comparing directly to their luminosity functions for
|
|
Seyfert galaxies and low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGN) (both
|
|
type I and II), and find that our distribution $\nLp$ and model for
|
|
quasar lifetimes and obscuration reproduces the complete observed
|
|
luminosity function down to a B-band luminosity $M_{B}\sim-16$.
|
|
Although our prediction falls below the observed Seyfert luminosity
|
|
function at fainter magnitudes, there is no reason to believe that
|
|
mergers should be responsible for all nuclear activity at these
|
|
luminosities (and indeed alternative fueling mechanisms for such faint
|
|
objects likely exist) - it is surprising, in fact, that this picture
|
|
reproduces the observed AGN activity to such faint luminosities.
|
|
|
|
Using the bolometric corrections of \citet{Elvis94} instead of
|
|
\citet{Marconi04} results in a significantly steeper cutoff in the
|
|
luminosity function at high bolometric luminosities, as the bolometric
|
|
luminosity inferred for the brightest observed X-ray quasars is almost
|
|
an order of magnitude smaller using the \citet{Elvis94}
|
|
corrections. However, this is because the \citet{Elvis94} bolometric
|
|
corrections do not account for any dependence on luminosity, and
|
|
further the quasars in the sample of Elvis et al.\ (1994) are X-ray
|
|
bright \citep{ERZ02}, whereas it has been well-established that the
|
|
ratio of bolometric luminosity to hard or soft X-ray luminosity
|
|
increases with increasing luminosity
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Wilkes94,Green95,VBS03,Strateva05}. Recent comparisons
|
|
between large samples of quasars selected by both optical and X-ray
|
|
surveys \citep{RisalitiElvis05} further suggests that this is an
|
|
intrinsic correlation, not driven by e.g.\ the dependence of
|
|
obscuration on luminosity. For a direct comparison of the bolometric
|
|
luminosity functions resulting from the two corrections, we refer to
|
|
\citet{H05d}. Our analysis uses the form for the UV to X-ray flux
|
|
ratio, $\alpha_{\rm OX}$, from \citet{VBS03}, but our results are
|
|
relatively insensitive to the different values found in the
|
|
literature. It is important to account for this dependence, as it
|
|
creates a significant difference in the high-luminosity end of the
|
|
bolometric quasar luminosity function and implies that a
|
|
non-negligible fraction of the brightest quasars are not seen in
|
|
optical surveys \citep[see the discussion in][]{Marconi04,Richards05}.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f11.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f11.ps}
|
|
\caption{Running our predicted broad-line luminosity function
|
|
(determined in \S~\ref{sec:LF}, \ref{sec:BLqso}) to high redshifts, with either total
|
|
density (dashed lines) or break luminosity ($\lstar$; solid lines)
|
|
decreasing exponentially with redshift above $z=2$. In each panel,
|
|
our prediction is shown for the minimum and maximum redshift of
|
|
the corresponding interval from the COMBO-17 luminosity function
|
|
of \citet{Wolf03} (W03; black squares). Other references for the
|
|
observations shown are: R05 - \citet{Richards05}, WHO -
|
|
\citet{WHO94}, F01 - \citet{Fan01}, SSG - \citet{SSG}, KDC -
|
|
\citet{KDC}.
|
|
\label{fig:LF.highz}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Finally, our fitted form for the evolution of the break luminosity,
|
|
with $\lstar\propto\exp{(k_{L}\tau)}$, cannot continue to arbitrarily
|
|
high redshift. At redshifts $z\gtrsim2-3$, this asymptotes
|
|
because $\tau\rightarrow 1$, whereas the observed quasar population
|
|
declines above $z\sim2$. This difference is not important for most of
|
|
our calculated observables, as they are either independent of
|
|
high-redshift evolution or evolve with cosmic time in some fashion as
|
|
$\propto\int{\nLp\,{\rm d}t}$, with little time and thus negligible
|
|
contributions to integrated totals at high redshifts. However, some
|
|
quantities, in particular the high-mass end of the black hole mass
|
|
function (see \S~\ref{sec:smbh}), which is dominated by the small
|
|
number of the brightest quasars at high redshifts, can receive large
|
|
relative contributions from these terms. Therefore, it is important in
|
|
estimating these quantities to be aware of the turnover in the quasar
|
|
density at high redshifts.
|
|
|
|
We quantify this in Figure~\ref{fig:LF.highz}, where we show the
|
|
predicted broad-line luminosity function (where the broad-line phase
|
|
is determined below in \S~\ref{sec:smbh}) in six luminosity intervals
|
|
from $z\sim1.2-4.8$. The intervals are those of the COMBO-17
|
|
luminosity function from \citet{Wolf03}, but we further compare to the
|
|
observed luminosity functions of \citet{WHO94}, \citet{SSG},
|
|
\citet{KDC}, \citet{Fan01}, and \citet{Richards05} at the appropriate
|
|
(labeled) redshifts. At each redshift $z>2$, we take the
|
|
fitted $\nLp$ distribution above (Equations~\ref{eqn:nLp.lognorm},\
|
|
\ref{eqn:param.evol}) and rescale it according to an exponential
|
|
cutoff: either pure density evolution (PDE),
|
|
$\nLp\rightarrow\nLp\times10^{-\alpha_{\rm PDE}\,(z-2)}$, or pure peak
|
|
luminosity evolution (PPLE),
|
|
$\lstar\rightarrow\lstar\times10^{-\alpha_{\rm PPLE}\,(z-2)}$.
|
|
Fitting to the data gives $\alpha_{\rm PDE}\sim0.65$ and $\alpha_{\rm
|
|
PPLE}\sim0.55$, ($\reducechi\approx1.3$ for both) in reasonable
|
|
agreement with the density evolution of e.g.\ Fan et al.\ (2001). We
|
|
note that this evolution, extrapolated as far as $z\sim6$, is
|
|
consistent also with the constraints on $z\sim6$ quasars from
|
|
\citet{Fan03}, especially in the PPLE case.
|
|
|
|
In each panel, we plot the resulting broad-line luminosity function
|
|
(see \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}), for both the minimum and maximum redshift of
|
|
the redshift bin, and both the PPLE (solid lines) and PDE (dashed
|
|
lines) cases. The degeneracy between these
|
|
possibilities is well-known, as
|
|
current observations do not resolve the break in the luminosity
|
|
function. Furthermore, the predicted luminosity function should be
|
|
considered uncertain especially at low luminosities, as the quasar
|
|
lifetime at these luminosities and redshifts can become comparable to
|
|
the age of the Universe, at which point our formalism for the
|
|
luminosity function as a function of $\nLp$ becomes inaccurate.
|
|
However, we are able to make testable predictions, based on
|
|
differences between the two models in integrated {\em galaxy}
|
|
properties (for example, color-magnitude diagrams of red sequence
|
|
galaxies at low masses or the fraction of recently formed spheroids as
|
|
a function of mass and redshift), which distinguish the PPLE and PDE
|
|
models for the evolution of the quasar luminosity function at
|
|
$z\gtrsim2-3$ \citep{H05e}. Owing to these degeneracies and the poor
|
|
constraints on the observed high-redshift luminosity functions, we
|
|
have not considered them (those at $z>3$) in our fits to $\nLp$, but
|
|
use them here to roughly constrain the turnover in the quasar
|
|
density above $z\sim2$ (i.e.\ fitting to $\alpha_{\rm PDE}$ and
|
|
$\alpha_{\rm PPLE}$). Which form of the turnover we use makes little
|
|
difference in our subsequent analysis, but, as discussed above,
|
|
including {\em some} turnover is important in calculating select
|
|
quantities such as the extreme high-mass end of the black hole mass
|
|
function.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Observed \NH\ Distribution}
|
|
\label{sec:NHdistrib}
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f12.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f12.ps}
|
|
\caption{Left panel: Distribution of column densities expected
|
|
from the characteristic quasars $\Lp\sim\lstar$ of the luminosity
|
|
function observed in optical samples, for a standard torus model
|
|
of quasar obscuration (dashed),
|
|
a receding torus model (dotted), and the distributions of column densities
|
|
as a function of instantaneous and peak luminosity in our simulations (solid).
|
|
The distribution of neutral
|
|
\NHI\ values is obtained requiring an observed B-band luminosity
|
|
$>\Lcut{11}$. The smooth red curve is the best-fit to the
|
|
$E_{B-V}$ distribution of bright SDSS quasars with $z<2.2$, from
|
|
\citet{Hopkins04}, rescaled to column densities and plotted about
|
|
a peak (mode) \NHI\ (undetermined in Hopkins et al.\ 2004) of
|
|
$\nhi\approx0.5\times10^{21}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$. The $i$-band
|
|
absolute magnitude limit imposed in the observed sample,
|
|
$M_{i}<-22$, corresponds approximately to our plotted B-band limit
|
|
$\LBo>\Lcut{11}$. Reproduced from \citet{H05b}. Right panel:
|
|
Integrated distribution of total (neutral and ionized) column
|
|
densities expected for a complete hard X-ray sample, from the
|
|
column densities of our simulations and the $\nLp$
|
|
distribution. The distribution below $10^{21}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$ is
|
|
shown (dot-dashed line) and re-plotted as a single bin at
|
|
$\nh=10^{20}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$ for our modeled columns. Data shown are the results of
|
|
\citet{Treister04} (blue squares) and \citet{Mainieri05} (red
|
|
circles), with assumed Poisson errors. Solid squares assume an
|
|
intrinsic photon index $\Gamma=1.9$, for the soft X-ray quasar
|
|
spectrum, open squares $\Gamma=1.7$.
|
|
\label{fig:NH.distrib}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Given the column density distributions and quasar lifetimes calculated
|
|
from our simulations in \S~\ref{sec:methods}, and the quantity $\nLP$
|
|
determined above (\S~\ref{sec:fullLF}), we can predict the
|
|
distribution of column densities observed in a given sample. This will
|
|
depend not only on the range of observed luminosities and the redshift
|
|
of the sample, but also on the minimum observed magnitude and
|
|
frequency (i.e.\ the selection function) of the sample. For a nearly
|
|
complete sample or estimate of the luminosity function, for example
|
|
the hard X-ray luminosity function, at least to $\nh\sim10^{25}\ {\rm
|
|
cm^{-2}}$, we can integrate the $\nh(L,\Lp)$ distribution over
|
|
the $\nLP$ distribution (weighted by the lifetime at $L$).
|
|
|
|
Figure \ref{fig:NH.distrib} plots the resulting distribution of column
|
|
densities for this analysis. The left panel reproduces and expands
|
|
upon a portion of Fig.~3 of \citet{H05b}, showing the distribution of
|
|
column densities (scaled linearly) expected from the characteristic
|
|
quasars $\Lp\sim\lstar$ of the luminosity function observed in optical
|
|
samples, based on the simulated column density distributions as a
|
|
function of luminosity and peak luminosity (solid black line).
|
|
Specifically, we plot the distribution of neutral \NHI\ values
|
|
requiring that the observed B-band luminosity be above some reference
|
|
value $\LBm$. The smooth curve shown is the best-fit to the $E_{B-V}$
|
|
distribution of bright SDSS quasars with $z<2.2$, from
|
|
\citet{Hopkins04}. The curve has been rescaled in terms of the column
|
|
density (inverting our gas-to-dust prescription) and plotted about a
|
|
peak (mode) \NHI\ (undetermined in Hopkins et al.\ 2004) of
|
|
$\nhi\approx0.5\times10^{21}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$. The observationally
|
|
implied $E_{B-V}$ distribution is determined from fitting to the
|
|
distribution of photometric reddening in all SDSS bands (i.e.\ using
|
|
the five-band photometry as a proxy for spectral fitting) in Sloan
|
|
quasars, relative to the modal quasar colors at each redshift, for
|
|
quasars with an absolute magnitude limit $M_{i}<-22$. The $i$-band
|
|
absolute magnitude limit imposed in the observed sample, $M_{i}<-22$,
|
|
corresponds approximately to our plotted B-band limit
|
|
$\LBo>\Lcut{11}$. This estimate does not account for bright but
|
|
strongly reddened quasars having their colors altered to the point
|
|
where color selection criteria of quasar surveys will not include
|
|
them. However, this effect would only serve to bring our distribution
|
|
into better agreement with observations, as it would slightly lower
|
|
the high-\NHI\ tail. We also consider the predictions of a standard
|
|
torus model and receding (luminosity-dependent) torus model in the
|
|
figure (dashed and dotted lines, respectively). These should not be
|
|
taken literally in this case -- they reflect that these
|
|
phenomenological models do not predict the distribution of
|
|
low/moderate column densities, but rather assume that all lines
|
|
of sight not intersecting the torus are ``unobscured,'' and encounter
|
|
some constant, small column density (usually chosen to be
|
|
$\nh\sim10^{20}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$).
|
|
|
|
The right panel of \ref{fig:NH.distrib} shows the integrated
|
|
distribution (in $\log\nh$) for a complete hard X-ray
|
|
sample, both as predicted from our simulations based on the joint
|
|
distribution of column density, luminosity, and peak luminosity
|
|
(solid), and for both the standard torus model (dashed) and receding
|
|
torus model (dotted) described in \S~\ref{sec:altmodels}. The data
|
|
shown are the results of \citet{Treister04} (blue squares) and
|
|
\citet{Mainieri05} (red circles), with assumed Poisson errors, from
|
|
multiband {\it Chandra} and {\it HST} observations of GOODS
|
|
fields. The solid squares are obtained by assuming an intrinsic photon
|
|
index for the soft X-ray quasar spectrum of $\Gamma=1.9$, the open
|
|
squares assuming $\Gamma=1.7$. For the sake of direct comparison with
|
|
observed distributions, objects with $\nh<10^{21}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$, for
|
|
which only an upper limit to the column density would be determined in
|
|
X-ray observations, are grouped together and plotted as a single bin
|
|
at $\nh=10^{20}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$. The actual distribution below
|
|
$10^{21}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$ is shown as a dot-dashed line. We note that
|
|
our model of the quasar spectrum assumes a photon index $\Gamma=1.9$
|
|
in the soft X-ray, but this has no effect on the column densities
|
|
calculated from the surrounding gas in our simulations.
|
|
|
|
The agreement between the observed column density distribution and the
|
|
result of our simulations once the same selection effect is applied
|
|
supports our model for quasar evolution, and the good agreement
|
|
extends to both optical and X-ray samples. Probing to fainter
|
|
luminosities or frequencies less affected by attenuation broadens the
|
|
column density distribution, as is seen from the inferred column
|
|
density distributions in the X-ray. This broadening occurs because,
|
|
at lower luminosities, observers will see both intrinsically bright
|
|
periods extinguished by larger column densities (broadening the
|
|
distribution to larger \NH\ values) and intrinsically faint periods
|
|
with small column densities (broadening the distribution to smaller
|
|
\NH\ values). The distribution as a function of reference luminosity
|
|
is a natural consequence of the dynamics of the quasar
|
|
activity. Throughout much of the duration of bright quasar activity,
|
|
column densities rise to high levels as a result of the same process
|
|
that feeds accretion, producing the well-known reddened population of
|
|
quasars \citep[e.g.][]{Webster95,Brotherton01,Francis01,
|
|
Richards01,Gregg02,White03,Richards03}, extending to bright quasars
|
|
strongly reddened by large \NHI. Furthermore, a significant number of
|
|
quasars are extinguished from optical samples or attenuated to lower
|
|
luminosities, giving rise to the distinction between luminosity
|
|
functions in the hard X-ray, soft X-ray, and optical.
|
|
|
|
The standard torus model described in \S~\ref{sec:altmodels}, although
|
|
unable to predict the distribution of column densities seen in
|
|
optically, relatively unobscured quasars, does a fair job of reproducing
|
|
the observed distribution of X-ray column densities. The parameters of
|
|
the model are, of course, chosen to reproduce the data shown
|
|
\citep[the model parameters are taken
|
|
from][]{Treister04}. Nevertheless, our prediction is still a
|
|
better fit to the observed distribution, with
|
|
$\reducechi\approx2$ as opposed to $\reducechi\approx7$ (although the
|
|
absolute values depend on the estimated systematic
|
|
errors in the column density estimations). The receding torus model
|
|
fares even more poorly in reproducing the observed column density
|
|
distributions, and is ruled out at high significance
|
|
($\reducechi\approx10$), although this can be alleviated if the
|
|
observed samples are assumed to be incomplete above
|
|
$\nh\sim10^{23}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$. This disagreement results because, in
|
|
order to match the observed scaling of broad-line fraction with
|
|
luminosity (see \S~\ref{sec:BLqso} below), this model assumes a
|
|
larger covering fraction for the torus at lower luminosities,
|
|
normalized to a similar obscured fraction as the standard torus model
|
|
near the break in the observed quasar luminosity function. However,
|
|
since quasars with luminosities below the break dominate the total
|
|
number counts, this predicts that the cumulative column density
|
|
distribution must be significantly more dominated by objects with
|
|
large covering angles, giving a larger Compton-thick population,
|
|
inconsistent with the actual observed column density distribution.
|
|
|
|
Although we do not see a significant fraction of extremely
|
|
Compton-thick column densities $\nh\gtrsim10^{26}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$ in
|
|
the distributions from our simulations, our model does not rule out
|
|
such values. It is possible that bright quasars in unusually massive
|
|
galaxies or quasars in higher-redshift, compact galaxies which we have
|
|
not simulated may, during peak accretion periods, reach such values in
|
|
their typical column densities. Moreover, as our model assumes
|
|
$\sim90\%$ of the mass of the densest gas is clumped into cold-phase
|
|
molecular clouds, a small fraction of sightlines will pass through
|
|
such clouds and measure column densities similar to those shown for
|
|
the ``cold phase gas'' in, e.g.\ Figure 2 of \citet{H05a},
|
|
$\nh\gtrsim10^{25-26}{\rm cm^{-2}}$.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, we have not determined the ``shape'' at any instant of
|
|
the obscuration (e.g.\ the dependence of obscuration on radial
|
|
direction), as in practice, for most of the most strongly obscured
|
|
phases in peak merger activity, the central regions of the merging
|
|
galaxies are highly chaotic. Generally, the scale of the obscuration
|
|
in the peak merger phases is $\sim100\,$pc, quite different than that
|
|
implied by most traditional molecular torus models, but we note that
|
|
our resolution limits, $\sim 20\,$pc in the dense central regions of
|
|
the merger, prevent our ruling out collapse of gas in the central
|
|
regions into a smaller but more dense torus. However, several efforts
|
|
to model traditional tori through radiative transfer simulations
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{GD94,Schartmann05} suggest significant column
|
|
densities produced on scales of $\sim100-200\,$pc, comparable to our
|
|
predictions, and we note that only the solid angle covered by a torus,
|
|
not the absolute torus scale, is constrained in the typical
|
|
phenomenological torus model \citep[e.g.][]{Antonucci93}.
|
|
|
|
Whether the obscuration of bright quasars originates on larger scales
|
|
than is generally assumed is observationally testable, either through
|
|
direct probes of polarized scattered light tracing the
|
|
obscuring/reflecting structure \citep[e.g.,][]{Zakamska05}, or through
|
|
correlations between obscuration and e.g.\ host galaxy morphologies
|
|
and inclinations \citep[e.g.,][]{Donley05}. These larger scales
|
|
typical of the central regions of a galaxy are widely accepted as the
|
|
scales of obscuration in starbursting systems (e.g.\ Soifer et
|
|
al. 1984a,b; Sanders et al.\ 1986, 1988a,b; for a review, see e.g.\
|
|
Soifer et al.\ 1987), which in our modeling is associated with rapid
|
|
obscured quasar growth and precedes the quasar phase. Thus, it is
|
|
natural to associate obscuration with these large scales in any
|
|
picture which associates starbursts and rapid black hole growth or
|
|
quasar activity, as opposed to the smaller scales $\sim$\,pc
|
|
implied by torus models primarily developed to reproduce observations of
|
|
quiescent, low-luminosity Type II AGN, which are usually not directly
|
|
associated with merger activity. These low-luminosity AGN are in a
|
|
relaxed state, suggesting the possibility that the remaining cold gas
|
|
in the central regions of our merger remnants will collapse once the
|
|
violent effects of the merger and bright quasar phase have passed,
|
|
producing a more traditional small torus in a quiescent nucleus. The
|
|
central point is that regardless of the form of obscuration, the
|
|
typical magnitude of the obscuration is a strongly evolving function
|
|
of time, luminosity, and host system properties, and the observed
|
|
column density distributions reflect this evolution.
|
|
|
|
\section{Broad-Line Quasars}
|
|
\label{sec:BLqso}
|
|
\subsection{Determining the Broad-Line Phase}
|
|
\label{sec:whenBL}
|
|
|
|
Optical samples typically identify quasars through their colors,
|
|
relying on the characteristic non-stellar power-law continua of such
|
|
objects. However, observations of X-ray selected AGN show a large
|
|
population of so-called Type 2 AGN, most of which have Seyfert-like
|
|
luminosities and typical spectra in X-rays and wavelengths longward of
|
|
$1\,\mu$m \citep[e.g.,][]{Elvis94}, but are optically obscured to the
|
|
point where no broad lines are visible. Their optical continua, in
|
|
other words, resemble those of typical galaxies and thus they are not
|
|
identified by conventional color selection techniques in optical
|
|
quasar surveys. Traditional unification models \citep{Antonucci93}
|
|
have postulated a static torus as the explanation for the existence of
|
|
the Type 2 population, with such objects viewed through the dusty
|
|
torus and thus optically obscured. Moreover, both synthesis models
|
|
of the X-ray background
|
|
\citep{SW89,Madau94,Comastri95,Gilli99,Gilli01} and recent direct
|
|
observations in large surveys \citep[e.g.,][]{Zakamska04,Zakamska05}
|
|
indicate the existence of a population of Type 2 quasars, with similar
|
|
obscuration but intrinsic (unobscured) quasar-like luminosities.
|
|
|
|
Observations of both radio-loud
|
|
\citep{HGD96,SRL99,Willott00,SR00,GRW04} and radio-quiet
|
|
\citep{Steffen03,Ueda03,Hasinger04,sazrev04,Barger05,Simpson05}
|
|
quasars, however, have shown that the broad-line fraction increases
|
|
with luminosity, with broad-line objects representing a large fraction
|
|
of all AGN at luminosities above the ``break'' in the luminosity
|
|
function and rapidly falling off at luminosities below the break.
|
|
Modifications to the standard torus unification model explain this via
|
|
a luminosity-dependent inner torus radius \citep{Lawrence91}, but this
|
|
represents a tunable modification to a purely phenomenological
|
|
model. Furthermore, as the observations have improved, it has become
|
|
clear that even these luminosity-dependent torus models cannot produce
|
|
acceptable fits to the broad line fraction as a function of luminosity
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Simpson05}. However, we have shown above that the
|
|
obscuring column, even at a given luminosity, is an evolutionary
|
|
effect, dominated by different stages of gas inflow in different
|
|
merging systems giving rise to varying typical column densities,
|
|
rather than a single static structure. It is of interest, then, to
|
|
calculate when quasars will be observed as broad-line objects, and to
|
|
compare this with observations of broad line quasars and their
|
|
population as a function of luminosity.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f13.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f13.ps}
|
|
\caption{Intrinsic (right panels) and median attenuated (left
|
|
panels) B-band luminosity of the quasar (thick line) and host
|
|
galaxy (integrated over all stars, thin line; ignoring bulge
|
|
stars, dotted line) as a function of time. Results are shown from
|
|
three representative simulations: A2, A3, and A5 (see \S~\ref{sec:sims})
|
|
with $\qeos=1.0,\, \zgal=0$, and virial velocities
|
|
$\vvir=113,\, 160,\ {\rm and}\ 320\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$. Each
|
|
quasar should be observable as a broad-line AGN when $L_{\rm
|
|
B,\,QSO}\gtrsim L_{\rm B,\,host}$. Colors show the stellar light curve
|
|
with different gas fractions $\fgas=1.0$ (black), $\fgas=0.4$ (blue),
|
|
and $\fgas=0.2$ (red); quasar light curves are similar for each gas fraction.
|
|
\label{fig:BL.in.sims}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims} shows the B-band luminosity as a function
|
|
of time for both the quasars and host galaxies in three representative
|
|
simulations: the A2, A3, and A5 cases described in detail in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:sims}. These simulations each have $\fgas=1.0,\,
|
|
\qeos=1.0,\, \zgal=0$, with virial velocities $\vvir=113,\, 160\, {\rm
|
|
and}\ 320\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$, with resulting final black hole masses
|
|
$\mbhf=3\times10^{7},\ 3\times10^{8},\ {\rm and}\ 2\times10^{9}\,
|
|
M_{\sun}$, respectively. The thick line in each case shows the quasar
|
|
B-band luminosity, and the thin line shows the integrated B-band
|
|
luminosity of all stars in the galaxy. New stars are formed
|
|
self-consistently in the simulations according to the ISM gas
|
|
properties, equation of state and star formation model described in
|
|
\citet{SH03}, with the age and metallicity taken from the local
|
|
star-forming ISM gas, which is enriched by supernova feedback from
|
|
previous star formation. We then use the stellar population synthesis
|
|
model of \citet{Bruzual03} to determine the B-band luminosity (the
|
|
B-band mass-to-light ratio) of new stars based on the stellar age and
|
|
metallicity. The dotted line shows the result neglecting bulge
|
|
particles, which must be initialized at the beginning of the
|
|
simulation with random or uniform ages and metallicities instead of
|
|
those quantities being determined self-consistently from the
|
|
simulation physics. The right panels plot the intrinsic values of
|
|
these quantities, and the left panels plot the median observed values
|
|
of these quantities, where we have used our method for determining
|
|
column densities and dust attenuation (\S~\ref{sec:NH}) to every star
|
|
and bulge particle for each line of sight.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, the host galaxy luminosity does {\em not} scale
|
|
with instantaneous and peak quasar luminosity as do, for example, the
|
|
quasar lifetime and obscuration. Rather, there are important
|
|
systematic dependencies, the largest of which is the dependence on host galaxy gas
|
|
fraction. If the host galaxies are more massive, more concentrated,
|
|
or have a weaker ISM equation of state pressurization, then they will
|
|
more effectively drive gas into the central regions and maintain high
|
|
gas densities for longer periods of time, as the deeper potential well
|
|
or lack of gas pressure requires more heat input from the quasar
|
|
before the gas can be expelled. These conditions will generally
|
|
produce a quasar with a larger peak luminosity (final black hole
|
|
mass), but also form more new stars, meaning that the B-band relation
|
|
between host and quasar luminosity is roughly preserved.
|
|
|
|
However, the the black hole consumes only a small fraction of the
|
|
available gas (comparison of e.g.\ the stellar mass and black
|
|
hole mass suggests the black hole consumes $\sim0.1\%$ of the gas
|
|
mass), and so, at least above some threshold $\fgas\lesssim0.1$, the
|
|
quasar peak luminosity does not significantly depend on the galaxy gas
|
|
fraction (see, e.g.\ Figure 2 of Robertson et al.\ 2005b). But, the
|
|
mass of new stars formed {\it during} the merger does strongly depend on the
|
|
available gas. For example, simulations which are otherwise identical
|
|
but have initial $\fgas=0.2,\ 0.4,\ 0.8,\ 1.0$ (i.e.\ an increasing
|
|
fraction of the initial disk mass in gas instead of stars) produce
|
|
similar peak quasar luminosity and final total stellar mass (within
|
|
$\sim30\%$ of one another), reflecting the conversion of most
|
|
gas into stars and the fact that the peak quasar luminosity is
|
|
determined more by the depth of the potential well than the total
|
|
available gas supply. But, the mass of {\it new}
|
|
stars formed in a merger scales
|
|
roughly as $M_{\ast,\, \rm new}\propto \fgas$ (as it must if the
|
|
initial gas fraction does not change the final total stellar mass),
|
|
and since young stellar populations dominate the observed B-band
|
|
luminosity (especially during the peak merger and starburst phases
|
|
associated with the bright quasar phase of interest), this implies
|
|
roughly that $L_{B}\propto\fgas$.
|
|
|
|
We demonstrate this explicitly in Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}, where
|
|
we show in each panel the host galaxy and stellar B-band light curves
|
|
for otherwise identical simulations with different gas fractions,
|
|
$\fgas=0.2\ {\rm (red)},\ 0.4\ {\rm (blue)},\ {\rm and}\ 1.0\ {\rm
|
|
(black)}$. In each of these cases, the quasar light curve is nearly
|
|
identical (we show only the $\fgas=1.0$ quasar lightcurve, for
|
|
clarity, but the others are within $\sim30\%$ of the curve shown at
|
|
most times, with no systematic offset).
|
|
|
|
In order for a quasar to be classified as a ``broad-line'' object, the
|
|
optical spectrum must be visible and identified as such in the
|
|
observed sample. This is clearly related to the ratio of quasar to
|
|
host galaxy luminosity, but the threshold for classification is not
|
|
obvious. In an X-ray or IR-selected sample, optical follow-up should
|
|
be able to disentangle host galaxy light and identify quasar
|
|
broad-line spectra with fluxes a factor of several fainter than the
|
|
host. However, automated optical selection based on color or
|
|
morphological criteria might well exclude objects unless the quasar
|
|
luminosity is a factor of several greater than that of the host
|
|
galaxy. Therefore, there is significant systematic uncertainty in the
|
|
theoretical definition of a broad-line quasar. To first order, based
|
|
on the above arguments, we can classify ``broad-line quasars'' as
|
|
objects in which the quasar optical luminosity is larger than some
|
|
multiple $f_{\rm BL}$ of the host galaxy optical luminosity. Because
|
|
the relevant ratio is different depending on the survey and selection
|
|
techniques, we consider the range $f_{\rm BL} = 0.3-3$, with a rough
|
|
median $f_{\rm BL}=1$. Furthermore, because our simulations do not
|
|
allow us to model the broad-line regions of the quasar or spectral
|
|
line structures as influenced by e.g.\ reddening and dust absorption,
|
|
we adopt the B-band luminosity of the quasar and host galaxy as
|
|
a proxy for optical luminosity and more complex (but often quite
|
|
sample-specific) color and morphological selection criteria.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f14.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f13.ps}
|
|
\caption{Ratio of observed (attenuated) B-band quasar luminosity to host galaxy luminosity
|
|
as a function of the ratio of instantaneous to peak quasar bolometric luminosity. Results are
|
|
from simulations A2 (black diamonds), A3 (blue circles), and A5 (red $\times$'s)
|
|
(the same simulations shown in Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims})
|
|
with $\qeos=1.0,\, \zgal=0$, and virial velocities
|
|
$\vvir=113,\, 160,\ {\rm and}\ 320\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$.
|
|
Each panel shows the same simulations except for a
|
|
different initial gas fraction $\fgas = 0.2,\ 0.4,\ 0.8,\ 1.0$ as labeled. Solid lines are the
|
|
predictions of Equation~\ref{eqn:BL.scaling}.
|
|
\label{fig:test.BL}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
In Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}, the B-band host galaxy luminosity is
|
|
quite flat as a function of time, relative to the quasar B-band
|
|
luminosity, and is roughly given by $L_{B}^{\rm gal}/L_{\sun}\sim
|
|
M_{\ast,\, \rm new}/M_{\sun}$, where $M_{\ast,\, \rm new}$ is the mass
|
|
of new stars formed in the merger. As noted above, this scales
|
|
approximately linearly with initial gas fraction at fixed final total
|
|
stellar mass $M_{\ast}$, giving $L_{B}^{\rm gal}/L_{\sun}\approx
|
|
c_{\rm gal} (M_{\ast}/M_{\sun})\fgas$, where $c_{\rm gal}$ is a
|
|
correction of order unity which we can fit from the simulations
|
|
(essentially a mean mass-to-light ratio for the newly formed stars).
|
|
The bolometric correction of the quasar is usually defined by $L_{\rm
|
|
bol}^{\rm qso}=c_{B}L_{B}^{\rm qso}$, and the quasar peak luminosity
|
|
is $\Lp=c_{L}\, L_{\rm Edd}(M_{\rm BH}^{f})$, where again $c_{L}$ is a
|
|
correction factor of order unity which we can calculate from our form
|
|
for the quasar lifetime (see Equation~\ref{eq:Mbhf}) or measure in the
|
|
simulations.
|
|
|
|
If we require that the quasar B-band luminosity be
|
|
larger than a factor $f_{\rm BL}$ of the host galaxy B-band
|
|
luminosity, we obtain
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
L_{\rm bol}^{\rm qso}/L_{\sun}>f_{\rm BL} c_{B}\, c_{\rm gal} (M_{\ast}/M_{\sun}) \fgas.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Dividing this through by $\Lp$, we have
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\frac{L_{\rm bol}^{\rm qso}}{\Lp}\gtrsim0.4\,\fgas\,f_{\rm BL}\
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{\rm gal}}{1.0}{\Bigr)}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{B}}{12.0}{\Bigr)}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{M_{\rm BH}^{f}/M_{\ast}}{0.001}{\Bigr)}^{-1}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{L}}{1.24}{\Bigr)}^{-1}.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
We can test this scaling relation against the results of our simulations,
|
|
and do so in Figure~\ref{fig:test.BL}. Rearranging the equations above
|
|
gives
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
%\begin{split}
|
|
%\frac{L_{B}^{\rm qso}}{L_{B}^{\rm gal}} \approx
|
|
%&\ 3.4\,\fgas^{-1}\,\frac{L_{\rm bol}^{\rm qso}}{\Lp}\\
|
|
%&\times{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{\rm gal}}{1.0}{\Bigr)}^{-1}
|
|
%{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{B}}{12.0}{\Bigr)}^{-1}
|
|
%{\Bigl(}\frac{M_{\rm BH}^{f}/M_{\ast}}{0.001}{\Bigr)}
|
|
%{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{L}}{1.24}{\Bigr)},
|
|
%\end{split}
|
|
%\label{eqn:BL.predict}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
\frac{L_{B}^{\rm qso}}{L_{B}^{\rm gal}} &\approx
|
|
&\ 3.4\,\fgas^{-1}\,\frac{L_{\rm bol}^{\rm qso}}{\Lp}\nonumber\\
|
|
&&\times{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{\rm gal}}{1.0}{\Bigr)}^{-1}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{B}}{12.0}{\Bigr)}^{-1}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{M_{\rm BH}^{f}/M_{\ast}}{0.001}{\Bigr)}
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{c_{L}}{1.24}{\Bigr)},
|
|
\label{eqn:BL.predict}
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
which we can compare to our direct calculation of
|
|
$L_{B}^{\rm qso}/{L_{B}^{\rm gal}}$ and $L_{\rm bol}^{\rm qso}/\Lp$
|
|
for each simulation snapshot.
|
|
|
|
Ultimately, we are not interested so much in the intrinsic B-band
|
|
luminosity of the quasar and host galaxy, but rather the observed
|
|
luminosities; i.e.\ we are interested in the ratio ${L_{B, \rm\
|
|
obs}^{\rm qso}}/{L_{B, \rm\ obs}^{\rm gal}} = ({L_{B}^{\rm
|
|
qso}}/{L_{B}^{\rm gal}})\,(\exp\{-(\tau_{Q}-\tau_{G})\})$, where
|
|
$\tau_{Q}$ and $\tau_{G}$ are ``effective'' optical depths which we
|
|
use to denote the mean attenuation of quasar and host galaxy B-band
|
|
luminosities, respectively. We have considered the distribution of
|
|
column densities attenuating the quasar as a function of instantaneous
|
|
and peak quasar luminosity in detail in \S~\ref{sec:NHfunction} above;
|
|
the attenuation of the host galaxy as a function of luminosity,
|
|
observed band, halo mass, and star formation rate are discussed in
|
|
detail in \citet{Jonsson05}. Combining these fits gives, roughly,
|
|
$(\exp\{-(\tau_{Q}-\tau_{G})\})\sim (M_{\rm
|
|
BH}^{f}/10^{8}\,M_{\sun})^{0.16}$, but a better approximation can be
|
|
determined directly from the simulations.
|
|
|
|
This scaling can be understood roughly using toy models of uniformly
|
|
mixed luminous sources within the galaxy described by
|
|
\citet{Jonsson05}, after accounting for the fact that the luminosity
|
|
(star formation rate) dependent portion of the attenuation scales with
|
|
luminosity in a similar manner to our quasar attenuation (compare our
|
|
$\tau_{Q}\propto\nh\propto L_{\rm qso}^{0.43-0.54}$ to their
|
|
$\tau_{G}\propto L_{\rm B,\ gal}^{0.55}$). The key consequence of this
|
|
is that more massive systems (higher bulge and black hole masses) have
|
|
their host galaxy light proportionally more attenuated in mergers,
|
|
meaning that (as suggested by the comparison of light curves in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}) the quasar is more likely to be observed
|
|
with an optical luminosity larger than that of its host.
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:test.BL} plots the ratio of the observed (attenuated)
|
|
B-band quasar luminosity to the observed host galaxy B-band luminosity
|
|
as a function of the ratio of instantaneous to peak quasar bolometric
|
|
luminosity. We show the results for four different gas fractions
|
|
$\fgas = 0.2,\ 0.4,\ 0.8,\ 1.0$ as labeled. For each gas fraction, we
|
|
consider our simulations A2 (black diamonds), A3 (blue circles), and
|
|
A5 (red $\times$'s) (the same simulations shown in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}) with $\qeos=1.0,\, \zgal=0$, and virial
|
|
velocities $\vvir=113,\, 160\, {\rm and}\ 320\, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$,
|
|
using the labeled initial gas fraction. The colored lines in each
|
|
panel show the predictions of combining the scalings expected for the
|
|
intrinsic luminosities (Equation~\ref{eqn:BL.predict}) and
|
|
attenuations as above, giving
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\frac{L_{\rm B,\ obs}^{\rm qso}}{L_{\rm B,\ obs}^{\rm gal}}=7.9\,\frac{1}{\fgas}\,
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{M_{\rm BH}^{f}}{10^{8}\,M_{\sun}}{\Bigr)}^{0.2}\ \frac{L}{\Lp},
|
|
\label{eqn:BL.scaling}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where the colored lines each use the $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$ and $\fgas$ of
|
|
the simulation of the corresponding color and panel. This scaling
|
|
provides a good estimate of the observed optical quasar-to-galaxy
|
|
luminosity ratio, including the complicated effects of attenuation,
|
|
evolving mass-to-light ratios, metallicities, and host galaxy
|
|
properties, as a function of gas fraction, final black hole mass, and
|
|
the ratio of the current to peak quasar luminosity. Although, for
|
|
clarity, we have not shown a range of simulations varying other
|
|
parameters, we find that this scaling is robust to the large number of
|
|
quantities we have considered in our simulations -- there
|
|
are systematic offsets in e.g.\ $\Lp$ and $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$ with
|
|
changes such as e.g.\ different ISM equations of state, but the
|
|
scaling in terms of $\Lp$ and $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$ is unchanged.
|
|
|
|
Because the ratio of observed quasar and host galaxy B-band
|
|
luminosities in our simulations obeys the scaling of
|
|
Equation~\ref{eqn:BL.scaling}, we can use it to predict the
|
|
properties of ``broad-line'' quasars, defined by $L_{\rm B,\ obs}^{\rm
|
|
qso}>f_{\rm BL} L_{\rm B,\ obs}^{\rm gal}$. To do so,
|
|
however, we must assume a typical host galaxy gas
|
|
fraction. Unfortunately, because our empirical modeling in terms of
|
|
the quasar lifetime as a function of $L$ and $\Lp$ does not have a
|
|
systematic dependence on host galaxy gas fraction (see
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}), we have no constraint on this parameter.
|
|
It is, however, convenient for several reasons to consider
|
|
$\fgas=0.3$ as a typical value for bright quasars.
|
|
|
|
First, such a gas
|
|
fraction is capable of yielding the brightest observed
|
|
quasars; second, scaling a Milky-Way like disk with the observed $z=0$
|
|
gas fraction $\sim0.1$ to the redshifts of peak quasar activity gives
|
|
a similar gas fraction \citep[e.g.,][]{SDH05a}; third, gas fractions
|
|
$\gtrsim30\%$ in major mergers are needed to explain the observed
|
|
fundamental plane (Robertson et al.\ 2005c, in preparation), kinematic
|
|
properties (Cox et al.\ 2005c, in preparation), and central phase
|
|
space densities (Hernquist, Spergel \& Heyl 1993) of elliptical
|
|
galaxies; fourth, this choice implies that the brightest quasars with
|
|
$M_{\rm BH}^{f}\sim10^{10}\,M_{\sun}$ attain observed B-band
|
|
luminosities $\sim1000$ times that of their hosts at their peaks, as
|
|
is observed \citep[e.g.,][]{MD04}. Finally, and most important, the
|
|
assumed $\fgas$ and $f_{\rm BL}$ are degenerate in our predictions for
|
|
the broad-line population, as they both enter linearly in the ratio of
|
|
host galaxy to quasar B-band luminosity. Therefore, the range of
|
|
$f_{\rm BL}=0.3-3$ which we consider (for a fixed median $\fgas=0.3$)
|
|
can be equivalently considered, for a fixed median $f_{\rm BL}=1$, to
|
|
represent a theoretical uncertainty in the host galaxy gas fraction,
|
|
$\fgas=0.1-0.9$; i.e.\ spanning the range from present, relatively
|
|
gas-poor Milky-Way like disks to almost completely gaseous
|
|
disks. This, then, gives for our ``broad-line'' criterion,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\frac{L}{\Lp}\gtrsim 0.2\,{\Bigl(}\frac{f_{\rm BL}}{1.0}{\Bigr)}\,
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{\fgas}{0.3}{\Bigr)}\,
|
|
{\Bigl(}\frac{M_{\rm BH}^{f}}{10^{7}\,M_{\sun}}{\Bigr)}^{-0.2}.
|
|
\label{eqn:BL.min}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
|
|
The ``broad-line'' phase is thus, as is clear from
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims} and implicit in our definition of the
|
|
broad-line phase, closely associated with the final ``blowout'' stages
|
|
of quasar evolution, when the mass of the quasar reaches that
|
|
corresponding to its location on the $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation and
|
|
gas is expelled from the central regions of the galaxy, shutting down
|
|
accretion \citep{DSH05}. We note that combining the equation above
|
|
with our fitted quasar lifetimes gives an integrated time when the
|
|
quasar would be observable as a broad line object of $t_{\rm
|
|
BL}\sim10-20$\,Myr, in good agreement with the optically observable
|
|
bright quasar lifetimes we calculate directly from our quasar light
|
|
curves, including the effects of attenuation, and with empirical
|
|
estimates of the quasar lifetime which are based directly on
|
|
optically-selected, broad-line quasar samples.
|
|
|
|
The $({M_{\rm BH}^{f}}/{10^{7}\,M_{\sun}})^{0.2}$ term in the above
|
|
equation reflects the fact that, below a certain peak luminosity,
|
|
quasars are less likely to reach luminosities above that of the host
|
|
galaxy, as can be seen in the uppermost panels of
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims} for a final black hole mass of
|
|
$\mbhf=3\times10^{7}$ -- i.e.\ the smallest AGN are
|
|
proportionally less optically luminous than their hosts. This does
|
|
not imply that such systems are not inherently broad-line objects, but
|
|
only that the host galaxy light will increasingly dominate at lower
|
|
luminosities. We also caution against extrapolating this to large or
|
|
small $M_{\rm BH}^{f}$, as the attenuation becomes more difficult
|
|
to predict at these peak luminosities, and the linear formula above is
|
|
not always accurate (see Figure~\ref{fig:test.BL}).
|
|
|
|
We can use this estimate of the broad-line phase and our model of the
|
|
quasar lifetime to calculate the total energy radiated in this bright,
|
|
optically observable stage following the calculation of
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}, but with a minimum luminosity determined
|
|
by Equation~\ref{eqn:BL.min}. This gives an integrated fraction
|
|
$\sim0.3-0.4$ ($\sim\exp\{-0.2\,f_{\rm BL}\,(\fgas/0.3)/\alpha_{L}\}$)
|
|
of the total radiant energy emitted during the broad-line phase. Thus,
|
|
despite the short duration of this optical quasar stage, a large
|
|
fraction of the total radiated energy is emitted (as it represents the
|
|
final $e$-folding in the growth of the black hole) when most of the
|
|
final black hole mass (\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}) is accumulated.
|
|
Accounting for the luminosity dependence of our bolometric corrections
|
|
(with the optical fraction of the quasar energy increasing with
|
|
bolometric luminosity) as well as the small fraction of objects
|
|
observable at lower luminosities (with larger typical obscuring column
|
|
densities) increases this fraction to as much as $\sim0.6-0.7$ for
|
|
bright quasars. Therefore, despite the fact that the {\em duration}
|
|
of the optically observable broad-line quasar phase may be $\sim1/10$
|
|
that of the obscured quasar growth phase, the changing quasar
|
|
luminosity over this period and non-trivial quasar lifetime as a
|
|
function of luminosity implies only small corrections to counting
|
|
arguments such as that of \citet{Soltan82}, which rely on the total
|
|
observed optical quasar flux density to estimate the relic
|
|
supermassive black hole density.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Broad-Line Fraction as a Function of Luminosity}
|
|
\label{sec:BLfraction}
|
|
|
|
By estimating the time that a quasar with some $\Lp$ will be
|
|
observable as a broad-line quasar at a given luminosity, we can then
|
|
calculate the broad-line quasar luminosity function in the same
|
|
fashion as the complete quasar luminosity function in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:fullLF}. Instead of the full quasar lifetime $\dtdL$, we
|
|
consider only the time during which broad-lines would be observed
|
|
(i.e.\ that the quasar spectrum would be recognized as opposed to the
|
|
host galaxy spectrum), as identified in our simulations
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:whenBL}).
|
|
|
|
For a sample selected in hard X-rays (i.e.\ the selection function
|
|
only being relevant at column densities $\gtrsim10^{24}\ {\rm
|
|
cm^{-2}}$), we show the resulting ``broad-line'' luminosity function
|
|
in Figure~\ref{fig:LF.all} (cyan dot-dashed lines), and compare it to
|
|
the broad-line quasar luminosity function identified in the hard X-ray
|
|
luminosity function of \citet{Barger05}. The agreement is good at all
|
|
luminosities, and our model explains both the fact that broad-line
|
|
quasars dominate the luminosity function at luminosities well above
|
|
the ``break'' in the luminosity function, and the downturn in the
|
|
broad-line quasar population at luminosities below the
|
|
peak. Essentially, the broad-line quasar population more closely
|
|
traces the shape of the $\nLP$ distribution, giving rise to the
|
|
observed behavior as a dual consequence of luminosity-dependent quasar
|
|
lifetimes and the evolutionary nature of quasar obscuration in our
|
|
simulations.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f15.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f14.ps}
|
|
\caption{Broad-line quasar luminosity function of
|
|
\citet{Richards05} from the 2dF-SDSS (2SLAQ) survey (black squares) and that
|
|
of \citet{Croom04} (green circles) from the 2dF survey, compared
|
|
to our predicted ``broad-line'' luminosity function from our
|
|
determination of the relative quasar and host galaxy luminosities in our simulations
|
|
(solid line), where we estimate that quasars are observable as ``broad-line'' objects
|
|
when their observed B-band luminosity is greater than a factor $f_{\rm BL}$ of that of the host galaxy,
|
|
Solid lines are
|
|
shown for the minimum and maximum observed redshift in each bin
|
|
(as labeled), assuming $f_{\rm BL}=1$. Dotted lines show the result for
|
|
$f_{\rm BL}=0.3$ and $f_{\rm BL}=3$, at the mean redshift
|
|
of the bin, i.e.\ corresponding to ``broad-line'' luminosity functions in surveys
|
|
which are complete to quasars with observed optical luminosity $\sim0.3$
|
|
and $3$ times that of the host galaxy, respectively, or alternatively reflecting
|
|
nearly complete theoretical uncertainty regarding merging galaxy gas fractions ($\fgas=0.1-0.9$).
|
|
Open squares are observations with uncertain incompleteness corrections
|
|
in \citet{Richards05}.
|
|
\label{fig:LF.sdss}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:LF.sdss} compares our theoretical predictions to the
|
|
2dF-SDSS (2SLAQ) g-band luminosity function of broad-line quasars from
|
|
\citet{Richards05} (black squares), as well as the B-band luminosity
|
|
function from \citet{Croom04} (green circles), at several redshifts
|
|
from $z\sim0.3-2$, over which range the surveys are expected to be
|
|
relatively complete (for broad-line quasars). The 2dF-SDSS result is
|
|
the most recent determination of the broad-line luminosity function,
|
|
but compares well with previous determinations by, e.g.,
|
|
\citet{Boyle88}, \citet{KK88}, \citet{MZZ88}, \citet{Boyle90},
|
|
\citet{BJS91}, \citet{Zitelli92}, \citet{Boyle00}, and
|
|
\citet{Croom04}. Open squares correspond to bins in luminosity which
|
|
have been corrected for incompleteness following
|
|
\citet{PageCarrera00}, but this correction is uncertain as the bins
|
|
are not uniformly sampled. We compare this at each redshift to the
|
|
prediction of our determination of the quasar ``broad-line'' phase,
|
|
where we estimate that the quasar is observable as a broad line object
|
|
when its observed B-band luminosity is greater than a factor $f_{\rm
|
|
BL}=1$ of that of the host galaxy. We calculate this for both the
|
|
minimum and maximum observed redshift of each bin to show the range
|
|
owing to evolution of the luminosity function over each interval in
|
|
redshift. The systematic uncertainty in our prediction can be
|
|
estimated from the dotted lines, which show the prediction (at the
|
|
mean redshift of the bin) if we instead require the observed quasar
|
|
B-band luminosity to be above a factor of 0.3 (upper lines) or 3
|
|
(lower lines) of the observed host galaxy B-band luminosity, which as
|
|
discussed in \S~\ref{sec:whenBL} can alternatively be considered an
|
|
uncertainty in host galaxy gas fraction, with $\fgas=0.1$ and
|
|
$\fgas=0.9$, respectively.
|
|
|
|
The agreement at all luminosities and redshifts shown is encouraging,
|
|
given the simplicity of our determination of the broad-line phase from
|
|
the simulations, but the systematic uncertainties are large,
|
|
emphasizing the importance of calculating detailed selection effects
|
|
in contrasting e.g.\ ``broad-line'' samples from optical and X-ray
|
|
surveys, as opposed to assuming a constant obscured fraction at a
|
|
given luminosity based on the ratio of luminosity functions as has
|
|
been adopted in previous phenomenological models. The difference
|
|
between different choices of $\fgas$ is suppressed at the high
|
|
luminosity (and correspondingly high redshift) end of the luminosity
|
|
function, because the quasar-to-galaxy B-band luminosity ratio scales
|
|
as $\propto (M_{\rm BH}^{f})^{0.2}$; i.e.\ regardless of the choice of
|
|
$f_{\rm BL}$, quasars increasingly overwhelm their host galaxy in
|
|
large systems near their peak luminosity. However, at low luminosity,
|
|
the predictions rapidly diverge, implying that a measurement of the
|
|
faint end of the broad-line quasar luminosity function, with a
|
|
reliable calibration of $f_{\rm BL}$, can constrain the typical gas
|
|
fractions of quasar host galaxies and the evolution of these gas
|
|
fractions with redshift.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f16.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f15.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted ``broad-line'' fraction of a complete X-ray
|
|
sample at low $z\lesssim0.3$ redshift, from our simulations (where
|
|
the object is observable as a broad-line quasar when it has an observed B-band
|
|
luminosity greater than a factor $f_{\rm BL}=1.0$ of that of its host galaxy), is shown (thick black
|
|
line). The results, changing our $f_{\rm BL}$ to 0.3 and
|
|
3.0 are shown, or equivalently of assuming a host galaxy gas fraction $\fgas=0.1$
|
|
or 0.9 instead of $\sim0.3$ (dashed), as are the results assuming a
|
|
``light bulb'' model where quasars spend a fixed time
|
|
$t_{Q}=20$\,Myr as broad line objects with a luminosity of $\Lp$
|
|
(dotted). For comparison, the (scaled to 2-10 keV luminosity)
|
|
observations of \citet{Ueda03} (squares), \citet{Hasinger04}
|
|
(circles), \citet{GRW04} (triangles), and \citet{Simpson05}
|
|
(diamonds) are shown. The predicted result at higher redshift
|
|
($z\gtrsim1$) is shown (red dot-dashed line), offset owing to the
|
|
shift in break luminosity of the luminosity function with
|
|
redshift. The best-fit luminosity-dependent torus model, {\em
|
|
fitted} to the data, is shown as the solid cyan line. The best-fit
|
|
static torus model is a constant broad-line fraction $\sim0.3$ (not shown for clarity).
|
|
\label{fig:BL.fraction}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
By dividing out the predicted luminosity function $\phi_{HX}$, we
|
|
can estimate the fraction of ``broad line'' objects observed in reasonably
|
|
complete X-ray samples as a function of luminosity. This is shown in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.fraction}, where for ease of comparison we have
|
|
shown the broad-line fraction as a function of hard X-ray (2-10 keV)
|
|
luminosity. Our prediction, based on determining the time
|
|
a quasar with a given luminosity $L$ and peak luminosity $\Lp$
|
|
in our simulations will be observable with a B-band luminosity greater
|
|
than a fraction $f_{\rm BL}=1.0$ of the host galaxy observed B-band
|
|
luminosity, is shown as the thick black line. This is compared to
|
|
the observations of \citet{Ueda03} (squares), \citet{Hasinger04}
|
|
(circles), \citet{GRW04} (triangles), and \citet{Simpson05}
|
|
(diamonds). The data from \citet{Hasinger04} has been scaled from
|
|
soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV) using our bolometric corrections, and the data
|
|
from \citet{GRW04} and \citet{Simpson05} have been converted from
|
|
[O{\sc~iii}] luminosity as in \citet{Simpson05} using the mean
|
|
correction for Seyfert galaxies \citep{Mulchaey94}, $L_{\rm
|
|
[O\,III]}=0.015\times L_{\rm 2-10\,keV}$.
|
|
|
|
We also plot as upper and lower dashed lines the results of changing
|
|
$f_{\rm BL}$, the fraction of the host galaxy B-band luminosity above
|
|
which the quasar B-band luminosity must be observed for identification
|
|
as a ``broad-line'' object, considering $f_{\rm BL}=0.3,\ {\rm and}\
|
|
3$, respectively. We determine this for the low-redshift
|
|
$z\lesssim0.3$ quasar distribution, from which most of the data are
|
|
drawn. The red dot-dashed line shows the difference at high redshift,
|
|
if just $z\gtrsim1$ quasars are considered (for $f_{\rm BL}=1$). The
|
|
broad-line fraction is systematically lower, primarily because the
|
|
break luminosity in the luminosity function moves to higher luminosity
|
|
with redshift, meaning that at a fixed luminosity below the break, a
|
|
smaller fraction of observed objects are at $L\sim\Lp$ in the
|
|
``blowout'' phase of peak optical quasar luminosity. Finally, the
|
|
dotted line shows the results assuming a ``light bulb'' model for the
|
|
broad-line phase (but still using our $\nLp$ distribution, otherwise
|
|
this translates to a constant obscured fraction with luminosity)
|
|
lifetimes, with a fixed broad-line lifetime of $t_{Q}=20\,$Myr.
|
|
|
|
The prediction of the most basic torus model, with constant broad-line
|
|
fraction $\sim0.36$, is ruled out to high significance
|
|
($\reducechi=18.5,\ 17.2$ if we consider all data points, or if we
|
|
consider only the most well-constrained data, from Simpson [2005],
|
|
respectively). Furthermore, the solid cyan line shows the best-fit
|
|
luminosity-dependent torus model, in which the broad line fraction is
|
|
given by \citep[e.g.,][]{Simpson98,GRW04}
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
f = 1 - 1/\sqrt{1 + 3L/L_{0}},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $L_{0}$ is the luminosity where the number of broad line objects
|
|
is equal to the number of non-broad line objects. This fit is at best
|
|
marginally acceptable over a narrow range in luminosities
|
|
($\reducechi=14.0,\ 7.3$). Modified luminosity-dependent, receding
|
|
torus models have been proposed which give a better fit to the data
|
|
by, for example, allowing the torus height to vary with luminosity
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Simpson05}, but there is no physical
|
|
motivation for these changes, and they introduce such variation
|
|
through additional free parameters that allow a curve of
|
|
essentially arbitrary slope to be fitted to the data.
|
|
|
|
However, the prediction of our model agrees reasonably well
|
|
($\reducechi=4.0,\ 1.2$) with the observations over the entire range
|
|
covered, a span of six orders of magnitude in luminosity. We emphasize
|
|
that our prediction, which matches the data better than standard torus
|
|
models that are actually {\em fitted} to the data, is not a fit to the
|
|
observations. Instead, it is derived from the physics of our
|
|
simulations, including black hole accretion and feedback which are
|
|
critical in driving the ``blowout'' phase which constitutes most of
|
|
the time a quasar is visible as a ``broad-line'' object by our
|
|
estimation, and from the $\dot n(L_{\rm peak})$ distribution implied
|
|
by our model of quasar lifetimes and the {\em bolometric} quasar
|
|
luminosity function. The agreement suggests that our choice of the
|
|
parameter combination $f_{\rm BL}\fgas=0.3$ is a good approximation.
|
|
As noted above, this implies that calibrating $f_{\rm BL}$ for an
|
|
observed sample, combined with the mean broad-line fraction and our
|
|
modeling, can provide a constraint (albeit model-dependent) on the
|
|
host galaxy gas fraction of quasars at a given redshift, which cannot
|
|
necessarily be directly measured even with difficult, detailed host
|
|
galaxy probes, as gas is rapidly converted into stars throughout the
|
|
merger. The uncertainty plotted, while large, actually represents a
|
|
larger theoretical uncertainty -- as discussed above, if an
|
|
observational sample were well-defined such that it were complete to
|
|
broad-line objects with observed optical luminosity above a
|
|
fraction $f_{\rm BL}$ of the host galaxy luminosity, the
|
|
range we consider would correspond to a range $\fgas=0.1-0.9$ in the
|
|
quasar host galaxy gas fraction, which the observations could then
|
|
constrain.
|
|
|
|
In our modeling, the broad line fraction as a function of luminosity
|
|
does not depend sensitively on the observed luminosity function, as
|
|
evidenced by the relatively similar prediction at high redshift. The
|
|
evolution we do predict with redshift, in fact, agrees well with that
|
|
found by \citet{Barger05} over the redshift range $z=0.1-1.2$ (see
|
|
also La Franca et al.\ 2005), an aspect of the observations which is
|
|
not reproduced in any static or luminosity-dependent torus model but
|
|
follows from the evolution of the quasar luminosity function in our
|
|
picture for quasar growth. However, we do caution that gas fractions
|
|
may systematically evolve with redshift, and as discussed above, a
|
|
higher gas fraction will give generally shorter ``broad-line''
|
|
lifetimes using our criteria of quasar optical luminosity being higher
|
|
than some fraction of the host galaxy luminosity, which will also
|
|
contribute to the evolution in the mean ``broad-line'' fraction with
|
|
redshift. Finally, neglecting the role of luminosity-dependent quasar
|
|
lifetimes gives unacceptable fits to the data ($\reducechi=66.0,\
|
|
77.5$), as the broad-line fraction as a function of luminosity is a
|
|
consequence of both the evolution of obscuration and the dependence of
|
|
lifetime on luminosity.
|
|
|
|
Our model for quasar evolution provides a direct physical motivation
|
|
for the change in broad line fraction with luminosity and suggests
|
|
that it is not a complicated selection effect. As an observational
|
|
sample considers higher luminosities (i.e.\ approaches and passes the
|
|
``break'' in the observed luminosity function), a comparison of the
|
|
luminosity function and the underlying $\nLp$ shows that it is
|
|
increasingly dominated by sources near their peak luminosity in the
|
|
final stages of Eddington limited growth. The final stages of this
|
|
growth expel the large gas densities obscuring the quasar, rendering
|
|
it a bright, optically observable broad-line object for a short
|
|
time. Therefore, we expect that the fraction of broad-line objects
|
|
should increase with luminosity in quasar samples, as
|
|
indicated by the observations.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f17.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f15b.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted ``obscured'' fraction (solid line) in an X-ray sample with identical
|
|
redshift and luminosity range to that of \citet{Ueda03}, as a function of hard X-ray
|
|
(2-10 keV) luminosity. Vertical error bars show
|
|
Poisson errors estimated from the total time at a given luminosity across all our simulations
|
|
(absolute values of the error bars should not be taken literally). The ``obscured'' fraction is defined
|
|
as the fraction of quasars with X-ray column densities $\nh>10^{22}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$ in
|
|
bins of $\Delta\log{L_{2-10\,{\rm keV}}}$. The observations from \citet{Ueda03} are shown
|
|
as black squares.
|
|
\label{fig:Ueda.BL}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Many observational measures do not consider a direct optical analysis
|
|
of the quasar spectrum in estimating the fraction of broad-line
|
|
objects as a function of luminosity. For example, \citet{Ueda03} adopt
|
|
a proxy, classifying as ``obscured'' any quasars with an X-ray
|
|
identified column density $\nh>10^{22}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$, and as
|
|
``unobscured'' quasars below this column density. We can compare to
|
|
their observations, using the column density distributions as a
|
|
function of luminosity from our simulations, which cover the entire
|
|
range in luminosity of the observed sample. Specifically, we use a
|
|
Monte Carlo realization of these distributions, employing our fitted
|
|
$\nLp$ distribution at each redshift to produce a list of quasar peak
|
|
luminosities and then generating all other properties based on the
|
|
probability distribution of a given property in simulations with a
|
|
similar peak luminosity. We describe this methodology in detail in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:discussion}, and provide several such mock quasar
|
|
distributions at different redshifts.
|
|
|
|
In Figure~\ref{fig:Ueda.BL}, we compare our estimated ``obscured'' and
|
|
``unobscured'' fractions as a function of hard X-ray luminosity, using
|
|
the same definitions as well as redshift and luminosity limits as the
|
|
observed sample. The solid line shows our prediction, with vertical
|
|
error bars representing Poisson errors, where the number of ``counts''
|
|
is proportional to the total time spent by simulations at the plotted
|
|
luminosity (the absolute value of these errors should not be taken
|
|
seriously). The ``obscured'' fraction is determined in bins of
|
|
luminosity $\Delta\log L_{2-10\ {\rm keV}}=0.5$. Despite our large
|
|
number of simulations, there is still some artificial ``noise'' owing
|
|
to incomplete coverage of the merger parameter space, namely the
|
|
apparent oscillations in the obscured fraction. However, the mean
|
|
trend agrees well with that observed (black squares), suggesting that
|
|
the success of our modeling in reproducing the fraction of ``broad
|
|
line'' objects as a function of luminosity is not a consequence of the
|
|
definitions chosen above. We do not show the predictions of the
|
|
standard and luminosity-dependent torus models, as (because
|
|
essentially any line of sight through the torus encounters a column
|
|
density $\nh>10^{22}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$) the predictions of these models
|
|
are identical to those shown and compared to the same observations in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.fraction}.
|
|
|
|
Our prediction that the fraction of broad-line objects should rise
|
|
with increasing luminosity is counterintuitive, given our fitted
|
|
column density distributions in which typical (median) column
|
|
densities increase with increasing luminosity. This primarily owes to
|
|
the simplicity of our \NH\ fits; we assume the distribution is
|
|
lognormal at all times, but a detailed inspection of the cumulative
|
|
(time-integrated) column density distribution shows that at bright
|
|
(near-peak) luminosities, the distribution is in fact bimodal (see
|
|
e.g.\ Figure 3 of Hopkins et al.\ 2005b and Figure 2 of Hopkins et
|
|
al.\ 2005d), representing both the heavily obscured growth phase and
|
|
the ``blowout'' phase we have identified here as the ``broad line''
|
|
phase. Over most of a simulation, we find the general trend shown in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:NH.systematics} and discussed above, namely that
|
|
typical column densities increase with intrinsic (unobscured)
|
|
luminosity. This is because the total time at moderate to large
|
|
luminosities is dominated by black holes growing in the
|
|
obscured/starburst stages; here, the same gas inflows fueling black
|
|
hole growth also give rise to large column densities and starbursts
|
|
which obscure the black hole activity. However, when the quasar nears
|
|
its final, peak luminosity, there is a rapid ``blowout'' phase as
|
|
feedback from the growing accretion heats the surrounding gas, driving
|
|
a strong wind and eventually terminating rapid accretion, leaving a
|
|
remnant with a black hole satisfying the $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$
|
|
relation. This can be identified with the traditional bright optical
|
|
quasar phase, as the final stage of black hole growth with a rapidly
|
|
declining density (allowing the quasar to be observed in optical
|
|
samples), giving typical luminosities, column densities, and lifetimes
|
|
of optical quasars. In these stages, larger luminosities imply more
|
|
violent ``blowout'' events, i.e.\ a brighter peak luminosity quasar
|
|
more effectively expels the nearby gas and dust, rendering a dramatic
|
|
decrease in column density at these bright stages (see Hopkins et al.
|
|
2005f).
|
|
|
|
We are essentially modeling this bimodality in more detail by directly
|
|
determining the ``broad-line'' phase from our simulations. However,
|
|
the broad line fraction-luminosity relation we predict is also a
|
|
consequence of the more complicated relationship between column
|
|
density, peak luminosity, and bolometric and observed luminosity, as
|
|
opposed to the predictions from a model with correlation between $\nh$
|
|
and only observed luminosity. The key point is that we find, near the
|
|
{\em peak} luminosity of the quasar, as feedback drives away gas and
|
|
slows down accretion, the typical column densities fall rapidly with
|
|
luminosity in a manner similar to that observed. In our model for the
|
|
luminosity function, quasars below the observed ``break'' are either
|
|
accreting efficiently in early stages of growth or are in
|
|
sub-Eddington phases coming into or out of their peak quasar
|
|
activity. Around and above the break, the luminosity function becomes
|
|
dominated by sources at high Eddington ratio at or near their peak
|
|
luminosities. Based on the above calculation, we then {\em expect}
|
|
what is observed, that in this range of luminosities, the fraction of
|
|
objects observed with large column densities will rapidly decrease
|
|
with luminosity as the observed sample is increasingly dominated by
|
|
sources at their peak luminosities in this blowout phase. This also
|
|
further emphasizes that the evolution of quasars dominates over static
|
|
geometrical effects in determining the observed column density
|
|
distribution at any given luminosity.
|
|
|
|
Finally, if host galaxy contamination were not a factor, we would
|
|
expect from our column density model that, at low luminosities
|
|
($L\lesssim\Lcut{10}$, well below the range of most observations
|
|
shown), the broad-line fraction would again increase (i.e.\ the
|
|
obscured fraction would decrease), as the lack of gas to power
|
|
significant accretion would also imply a lack of gas to produce
|
|
obscuring columns. However, at these luminosities, typical of faint
|
|
Seyfert galaxies or LINERs, our modeling becomes uncertain; it is
|
|
quite possible, as discussed previously, that cold gas remaining in
|
|
relaxed systems could collapse to form a traditional dense molecular
|
|
torus on scales $\sim\,$pc, well below our resolution
|
|
limits. Furthermore, host galaxy light is likely to overwhelm any AGN
|
|
broad-line contribution, and selection effects will also become
|
|
significant at these luminosities.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Distribution of Active Broad-Line Quasar Masses}
|
|
\label{sec:BLmasses}
|
|
|
|
Our determination of the ``broad-line'' or optical phase in quasar
|
|
evolution allows us to make a further prediction, namely the mass
|
|
distribution of currently active broad-line quasars. At some
|
|
redshift, the total number density of observed, currently active
|
|
broad-line quasars with a given $\Lp$ will be (in the absence of
|
|
selection effects)
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
n_{\rm BL}(\Lp)\approx\nLP\, t_{\rm BL}(\Lp),
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $t_{\rm BL}(\Lp)$ is the total integrated time that a quasar
|
|
with peak luminosity $\Lp$ spends as a ``broad-line'' object (using
|
|
our criterion for the ratio of the observed quasar B-band luminosity to
|
|
that of the host galaxy), given by integrating our formulae in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:whenBL} or directly calculated from the simulations.
|
|
Since we have determined roughly that a quasar should be observable as
|
|
a ``broad-line'' object at times with $L\gtrsim 0.2\,\Lp$ primarily
|
|
just after it reaches its peak luminosity, in the ``blowout'' phase of
|
|
its evolution, we expect the instantaneous black hole mass at the time
|
|
of observation as a broad-line quasar to be, on average, $M^{\rm
|
|
BL}_{\rm BH}\approx\mbhf(\Lp)$, where $\mbhf\sim M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)$
|
|
modulo the order unity corrections described in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}. Using our fitted $\nLP$ distribution from
|
|
the luminosity function, extrapolated to low redshift ($z\sim0$), and
|
|
combining it with the integrated ``broad-line'' lifetimes from our
|
|
simulations as above, we obtain the differential number density of
|
|
sources in a logarithmic interval in $\Lp$. Finally, we use our
|
|
Equation~\ref{eq:Mbhf} for $\mbhf(\Lp)$ determined from our fitted
|
|
quasar lifetimes (demanding that $E_{\rm rad}=\epsilon_{r}M_{\rm
|
|
BH}^{f}c^{2}$) to convert this to a distribution in black hole mass.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f18.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f16.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted distribution of currently active black hole masses,
|
|
both considering all types (Type I \&\ II; left) and only those visible as broad-line quasars (Type I; right),
|
|
at low $z\lesssim0.3$ redshift, from our $\nLP$ distribution and the estimation of the ``broad-line''
|
|
phase directly from the simulations.
|
|
In the left panel (all quasar types), we consider the result with
|
|
arbitrarily faint luminosity limits (dashed line),
|
|
and with the luminosity completeness limit (dotted) and both luminosity limit and velocity dispersion limit (dash-dot)
|
|
of the SDSS sample of \citet{Heckman04}. We then consider the mass distribution with these limits,
|
|
weighted by OIII luminosity, for direct comparison to the mass function of \citet{Heckman04}, shown as
|
|
red circles (vertical errors represent the range in different parameterizations of the luminosity-weighted mass function
|
|
from \citet{Heckman04}, their Fig.~1, horizontal errors a $\sim0.2$\,dex uncertainty in the black hole mass).
|
|
Black lines show this for our full model, red lines show the full distribution (dashed) and
|
|
distribution with the same weighting and selection effects as \citet{Heckman04} (solid) for a
|
|
light-bulb or exponential light curve model of quasar evolution.
|
|
At right, the distribution of active ``broad-line'' quasar masses (solid, where
|
|
an object is a ``broad-line'' quasar if the observed quasar B-band luminosity is above
|
|
a factor $f_{\rm BL}=1$ of that of the host galaxy -- dotted and dashed lines
|
|
show the result if $f_{\rm BL}=0.3$ or 3, respectively). Black lines show the prediction of the full
|
|
model, red and blue lines the predictions of a light-bulb/exponential light curve model with
|
|
a standard torus model (red) and receding torus model (blue) used to determine the broad-line fraction.
|
|
%agrees well with the active broad-line
|
|
%mass function from the SDSS, with some expected incompleteness in the SDSS sample at low $M_{\rm BH}$
|
|
%(Greene et al., in preparation).
|
|
\label{fig:BL.massfunct}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Our predicted $n(M_{\rm BH})$, i.e.\ the number of observed {\em
|
|
active} quasars at low redshift in a logarithmic interval of black
|
|
hole mass, is shown in Figure~\ref{fig:BL.massfunct}. We consider the
|
|
complete distribution of active quasar masses, for both broad-line and
|
|
non broad-line objects, in the left panel of the figure, and the
|
|
distribution of broad-line objects only, $n(M^{\rm BL}_{\rm BH})$, in
|
|
the right panel. On the left, we show the complete distribution which
|
|
would be observed without any observational limits (dashed line). We
|
|
calculate this from the distributions of Eddington ratios in our
|
|
simulations, as a function of current and peak luminosity, and our fit
|
|
to $\nLp$ (as, e.g.\ for our Monte Carlo realizations). We also
|
|
consider the observed distribution if we apply the luminosity limit
|
|
for completeness from the SDSS sample of \citet{Heckman04} (dotted),
|
|
$L_{\rm [O\,III]}>\Lcut{6}$, which using their bolometric corrections
|
|
yields $L>3.5\times\Lcut{9}$, and then additionally applying their
|
|
minimum velocity dispersion $\sigma>70\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$
|
|
(dot-dashed). Finally, we can weight this distribution by luminosity
|
|
(solid line) to compare directly to that determined in their
|
|
Fig.~1. The red points are taken from the luminosity-weighted black
|
|
hole mass function of \citet{Heckman04}, which serves as a rough
|
|
estimate of the {\em active} black hole mass distribution given their
|
|
selection effects. Vertical error bars represent the range in
|
|
parameterizations of the mass function from \citet{Heckman04},
|
|
including whether or not star formation is corrected for and limiting
|
|
the sample to luminosities $L\gtrsim\Lcut{10}$ or Eddington ratios
|
|
$>0.01$. Horizontal errors represent an uncertainty of $0.2\,$dex in the
|
|
black hole mass estimation (representative of uncertainties in the
|
|
$M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation used). The agreement is good, especially
|
|
given the significant effects of the selection criteria and
|
|
luminosity-weighting.
|
|
|
|
We also consider the predictions of a ``light-bulb'' or ``exponential
|
|
/ fixed Eddington ratio'' model of the quasar lifetime for the active
|
|
black hole mass distribution (red lines). For purposes of the active
|
|
black hole mass function, the two predictions are identical and
|
|
independent of the assumed quasar lifetime (modulo the arbitrary
|
|
normalization), as both assume that all observed quasars are accreting
|
|
at a fixed Eddington ratio, giving the distribution of active black hole
|
|
masses. The dashed line shows the prediction for the complete active
|
|
black hole mass function, which rises sharply to lower luminosities,
|
|
as it must given a luminosity function which increases monotonically
|
|
to lower luminosities. The solid line shows the prediction of such a
|
|
model with the complete set of selection effects from
|
|
\citet{Heckman04} described above applied, as with the solid black
|
|
line showing the prediction of our modeling. Here, we chose the
|
|
characteristic Eddington ratio $\approx1.0$ by fitting the predicted
|
|
curve to the \citet{Heckman04} observations. Note that both the
|
|
characteristic Eddington ratio and lifetime (normalization) of the
|
|
curve are fitted, so the relative normalization of this curve and our
|
|
full model prediction are not the same; for example, the predicted
|
|
total absolute number of active $M_{\rm BH}>10^{9}$ quasars is higher
|
|
in the full model than in the light-bulb or exponential models. Still,
|
|
it is clear that these models produce too broad a distribution of
|
|
active black hole masses, in disagreement with the observations. We
|
|
could, of course, obtain an arbitrarily close agreement with the
|
|
observations if we fit to the {\em distribution} of accretion rates,
|
|
but such a model would recover a quasar lifetime and accretion rate
|
|
distribution quite similar to ours, as is evident from the agreement
|
|
between the predictions of our simulations and the observations. A
|
|
purely empirical model of this type is considered by e.g.\
|
|
\citet{Merloni04}, who finds that similar qualitative evolution in the
|
|
quasar lifetime and anti-hierarchical black hole assembly to that
|
|
predicted by our modeling is implied by the combination of quasar
|
|
luminosity functions and the black hole mass function.
|
|
|
|
On the right of the figure, we show our predicted mass distribution
|
|
for low-redshift, active ``broad-line'' quasars (solid black lines),
|
|
where we estimate that an object is a ``broad-line'' quasar if the
|
|
observed quasar B-band luminosity is above a factor $f_{\rm BL}=1$ of
|
|
that of the host galaxy -- dotted and dashed lines show the result if
|
|
$f_{\rm BL}=0.3$ or 3, respectively, parameterizing the range of
|
|
different observed samples. As discussed above, the range of $f_{\rm
|
|
BL}$ shown can be, alternatively, thought of as a parameterization of
|
|
uncertainty in the host galaxy gas fraction, if (in an observed
|
|
sample), the sensitivity to seeing quasar broad lines against host
|
|
galaxy contamination is known. Therefore, the location of the peak in
|
|
the active broad-line black hole mass function can be used, just as
|
|
the mean broad line fraction vs.\ luminosity, as a test of the typical
|
|
gas fractions of bright quasar host galaxies, and can constrain
|
|
potential evolution in these gas fractions with redshift.
|
|
|
|
The prediction shown is testable, but appears to be in good
|
|
agreement with preliminary results for the distribution of active
|
|
broad-line black hole masses from the SDSS \citep[e.g.,][]{MD04}. The
|
|
observations may show fewer low-mass black holes than we predict, but
|
|
this is expected, as observed samples are likely incomplete at the low
|
|
luminosities of these objects (even at the Eddington limit, a
|
|
$10^{5}\,M_{\sun}$ black hole has magnitude $M_{g}\sim-16$). If, in
|
|
our model, we were to consider instead a standard torus scenario for
|
|
the definition of the broad-line phase, we would predict the same
|
|
curve as that shown in the left half of the figure (black dashed; our
|
|
prediction for the cumulative active black hole mass function). This
|
|
is because the standard torus model predicts that a constant fraction of
|
|
objects are broad-line quasars, regardless of mass or luminosity, thus
|
|
giving identical distributions of Type I and Type II quasar masses. If
|
|
we consider a luminosity-dependent or receding torus model, the
|
|
prediction is nearly identical to the black line shown. This is
|
|
because, as shown in Figure~\ref{fig:BL.fraction}, our prediction for
|
|
the broad line fraction as a function of luminosity is similar to that
|
|
of the receding torus model. The differences in the model predictions
|
|
for the broad-line fraction as a function of luminosity do manifest in
|
|
the prediction for the active broad-line black hole mass function, but
|
|
the difference in these models is smaller than the $\sim1\sigma$ range
|
|
from different values of $f_{\rm BL}$ shown. However, if we consider
|
|
different models for the quasar light curve or lifetime, the predicted
|
|
active broad-line mass function is quite different (as is the
|
|
cumulative active black hole mass function).
|
|
|
|
We show the predictions of a light-bulb or exponential light curve
|
|
model for quasar evolution in the figure, adopting either a standard
|
|
torus model (red) or receding torus model (blue) to determine the
|
|
broad-line fraction as a function of luminosity. For the standard
|
|
torus model, this predicts that the broad line mass function should
|
|
trace the observed luminosity function, rising monotonically to lower
|
|
black hole masses in power-law fashion (just as seen in the red dashed
|
|
line in the left half of the figure for the cumulative black hole mass
|
|
function). For the receding torus model, the active black hole mass
|
|
function shows a peak (because, at lower luminosities, there are more
|
|
observed quasars, but a larger fraction of them are
|
|
obscured). However, the location of this peak is at roughly an order
|
|
of magnitude smaller black hole mass than for our prediction. This
|
|
assumes a typical Eddington ratio $\sim1$, which we have fitted to the
|
|
cumulative black hole mass function -- the peak in the broad-line
|
|
active black hole mass function in these models could be shifted to
|
|
larger black hole masses by assuming a smaller typical Eddington
|
|
ratio, but this would only worsen the agreement with the cumulative
|
|
black hole mass function of \citet{Heckman04}. Furthermore, a robust
|
|
difference between the models is that the light bulb or
|
|
Eddington-limited/exponential models predict, for the standard torus
|
|
case, no turnover in the active broad-line black hole mass function,
|
|
and for the receding torus case, a broader distribution in active
|
|
broad-line quasar black hole masses than is predicted in our
|
|
modeling. Roughly, the lognormal width of this distribution in our
|
|
model is $\sim0.6$\,dex, whereas the light-bulb or exponential light
|
|
curve models have a distribution with width $\sim1.0$\,dex. As noted
|
|
above, we obtain a similar prediction if we adopt our full obscuration
|
|
model instead of the receding torus model here. A determination of
|
|
the range of active, broad-line quasar masses can, therefore,
|
|
constrain quasar lifetimes and light curves.
|
|
|
|
Our model makes an accurate prediction for the distribution of {\em
|
|
active} black hole masses, even at $z\sim0$ where our extrapolation of
|
|
the luminosity function is uncertain. It is important to distinguish
|
|
this from the predicted relic black hole mass distribution, derived in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:smbh}, which must account for all quasars, i.e.\ $\nLP$
|
|
integrated over redshift. We additionally find for broad-line
|
|
quasars, as we expect from our prediction of the broad-line phase,
|
|
that these objects are primarily radiating at large Eddington ratios,
|
|
$l\sim0.2-1$, but we address this in more detail in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:eddington}. The success of this prediction serves not only
|
|
to support our model, but also implies that we can extrapolate to
|
|
fairly low luminosities, even bright Seyfert systems at $z\sim0$.
|
|
This suggests that many of these systems, at least at the bright end,
|
|
may be related to our assumed quasar evolution model,
|
|
fueled by similar mechanisms and either exhibiting weak interactions
|
|
among galaxies or relaxing from an earlier, brighter stage in their
|
|
evolution. As we speculate in \S~\ref{sec:discussion}, our
|
|
description of self-regulated black hole growth may also be
|
|
relevant to fainter Seyferts, even those that reside in
|
|
apparently undisturbed galaxies.
|
|
|
|
\section{The Distribution of Eddington Ratios}
|
|
\label{sec:eddington}
|
|
|
|
In traditional models of quasar lifetimes and light curves, the
|
|
Eddington ratio, $l\equiv L/L_{\rm Edd}$ is generally assumed to be
|
|
constant. Even complex models of the quasar population which allow
|
|
for a wide range of Eddington ratios according to some probability
|
|
distribution $P(l)$ implicitly associate a fixed Eddington ratio with
|
|
each individual quasar, and do not allow for $P(l)$ to depend on
|
|
instantaneous luminosity or host system properties. However, this is a
|
|
misleading assumption in the context of our model, as the Eddington
|
|
ratio varies in a complicated manner over most of the quasar light
|
|
curve. Furthermore, the integrated time at a given Eddington ratio is
|
|
different in different systems, with more massive, higher peak
|
|
luminosity systems spending more time at large ($l \sim1$) Eddington
|
|
ratios.
|
|
|
|
The probability of being at a given Eddington ratio should properly be
|
|
thought of as a conditional joint distribution $P(l\,|\,L,\,\Lp)$ in
|
|
both instantaneous and peak luminosity, just as the quasar
|
|
``lifetime'' is more properly a conditional distribution
|
|
$t_{Q}(L\,|\,\Lp)$. Rather than adopting a uniform Eddington ratio or
|
|
Eddington ratio distribution, empirical estimates must consider more
|
|
detailed formulations such as the framework presented in \citet{SW03},
|
|
which allows for a conditional bivariate Eddington ratio distribution
|
|
and can therefore incorporate these physically motivated dependencies
|
|
and complications in de-convolving observations of the quasar
|
|
luminosity function to determine e.g.\ Eddington ratio distributions,
|
|
active black hole mass functions, and other physical quantities.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f19.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f17.ps}
|
|
\caption{Distribution of Eddington ratios (left panels) and
|
|
instantaneous black hole mass (right panels) as a function of quasar
|
|
bolometric luminosity for our fiducial Milky Way-like A3 simulation,
|
|
with $\vvir=160\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ and
|
|
$\Lp\sim5\times\Lcut{13}$. The trend of an increasingly narrow
|
|
Eddington ratio and mass distribution (concentrated at higher values)
|
|
with increasing luminosity is clear. The result of applying an
|
|
ADAF-type radiative efficiency correction at low accretion rates is
|
|
shown (dashed) as well as the result of considering only times after
|
|
the final merger, with $M_{\rm BH}\sim\mbhf$ (dotted).
|
|
\label{fig:Pofl.A3}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.A3} shows the distribution of Eddington ratios as
|
|
a function of luminosity for the fiducial, Milky Way-like A3
|
|
simulation ($\vvir=160\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$). Over the course of the
|
|
simulation, the system spends a roughly comparable amount of time at a
|
|
wide range of Eddington ratios from $l\sim0.001-1$. At high
|
|
luminosities, $L>\Lcut{12}$ for a system with $\Lp\approx\Lcut{13}$,
|
|
the range of Eddington ratios, is concentrated at high values
|
|
$l\sim0.5-1$ with some time spent at ratios as low as
|
|
$l\sim0.1$. Note, however, that the y-axis of the plot is scaled
|
|
logarithmically, so the time spent at $l\sim0.1$ in this luminosity
|
|
interval is a factor $\sim5$ smaller than the time spent at
|
|
$l\gtrsim0.5$. Considering lower luminosities $\Lcut{11}<L<\Lcut{12}$,
|
|
the distribution of Eddington ratios broadens down to
|
|
$l\sim0.01$. Going to lower luminosities still, $L<\Lcut{11}$, the
|
|
distribution broadens further, with comparable time spent at ratios as
|
|
low as $l\sim0.001$, and becomes somewhat bimodal. At large
|
|
luminosities near $\Lp$, the system is primarily in Eddington-limited
|
|
or near-Eddington growth. However, as we consider lower luminosities,
|
|
we include both early times when the black hole is growing efficiently
|
|
(high $l$) and late or intermediate times when the black hole is more
|
|
massive but the accretion rate falls (low $l$). As we go to lower
|
|
luminosities, the {\em total} time spent in sub-Eddington states
|
|
increasingly dominates the time spent at $l\sim1$, although the time
|
|
spent at any given value of $l$ is fairly flat with $\log(l)$.
|
|
|
|
Roughly, at some luminosity $L$, there is a constant probability of
|
|
being in some logarithmic interval in $l$,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
P(l | L,\Lp) \sim \left[\log\Bigl( \frac{\Lp}{L}\Bigr)\right]^{-1},\
|
|
\frac{L}{\Lp} < l < 1,
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
and $P(l | L,\Lp)=0$ otherwise. This is especially clear if we
|
|
compare the distribution of Eddington ratios in each luminosity range
|
|
obtained if we consider only times after the final merger of the
|
|
black holes (dotted histograms). At the highest
|
|
luminosities, the distribution is identical to that obtained
|
|
previously, since all the time at these luminosities is during the
|
|
final merger. However, as we move to lower luminosities, the
|
|
characteristic $l$ move systematically lower, as we are seeing only
|
|
the relaxation after the final ``blowout'' near $\Lp$, with
|
|
characteristic Eddington ratio $l=L/\Lp$ at any given luminosity
|
|
$L$. These trends are also clear if we consider the distribution of
|
|
{\em instantaneous} black hole masses in each luminosity interval
|
|
shown in the figure, which is trivially related to the Eddington ratio
|
|
distribution at a given luminosity $L$ as
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
M_{\rm BH} = M_{0}\,\frac{L}{l\,L_{\rm Edd}(M_{0})} = \frac{L\,t_{S}}{l\,\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
Of course, it is clear here that $M_{\rm BH}\approx
|
|
\mbhf=3\times10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$ if we consider only times after the
|
|
final merger.
|
|
|
|
It has also been argued from observations of stellar black hole
|
|
binaries that a transition between accretion states occurs at a
|
|
critical Eddington ratio $\dot{m}\equiv \dot{M}/\dot{M_{\rm Edd}}$,
|
|
from radiatively inefficient accretion flows at low accretion rates
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{EMN97} to radiatively efficient accretion through a
|
|
standard \citet{SS73} disk. Although the critical Eddington ratio for
|
|
supermassive black holes is uncertain, observations of black hole
|
|
binaries \citep{Maccarone03} as well as theoretical extensions of
|
|
accretion models \citep[e.g.,][]{MLMH00} suggest $\dot{m}_{\rm
|
|
crit}\sim0.01$. We can examine whether this has a large impact on our
|
|
predictions for the luminosity function and $\nLp$ distribution, by
|
|
determining whether the distribution of Eddington ratios is
|
|
significantly changed by such a correction. Because we assume a
|
|
constant radiative efficiency $L=\epsilon_{r}\,\dot{M}\,c^{2}$ with
|
|
$\epsilon_{r}=0.1$, we account for this effect by multiplying the
|
|
simulation luminosity at all times by an additional ``efficiency
|
|
factor'' $f_{\rm eff}$ which depends on the Eddington ratio
|
|
$l=L/L_{\rm Edd}$,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
f_{\rm eff} = \left\{ \begin{array}{ll}
|
|
1 & \mathrm{ if\ } \eEdd > 0.01 \\
|
|
100\,\eEdd & \mathrm{ if\ } \eEdd \leq 0.01.
|
|
\end{array}
|
|
\right.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
This choice for the efficiency factor follows from ADAF models
|
|
\citep{NY95} and ensures that the radiative efficiency is continuous
|
|
at the critical Eddington ratio $\eEdd_{\rm crit}=0.01$. Applying this
|
|
correction and then examining the distribution of Eddington ratios as
|
|
a function of luminosity (dashed histograms in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.A3}), we see that the distribution of Eddington
|
|
ratios is essentially identical, with only a slightly higher
|
|
probability of observing extremely low Eddington ratios
|
|
$l\lesssim0.001$. Of course, our modeling of accretion processes does
|
|
not allow us to accurately describe ADAF-like accretion at these low
|
|
Eddington ratios, but such low values are not relevant for the
|
|
observed luminosity functions and quantities with which we make our
|
|
comparisons. This implies that such a transition in the radiative
|
|
efficiency with accretion rate should not alter our conclusions
|
|
regarding the luminosity function and the $\nLp$ distribution
|
|
(essentially, the corrections are important only at luminosities well
|
|
below those relevant in constructing the observed luminosity
|
|
functions; see also Hopkins et al.\ 2005c for a calculation
|
|
of the effects of such a correction on the fitted quasar lifetime and
|
|
$\nLp$ distributions, which leads to the same conclusion).
|
|
|
|
Despite the broad range of Eddington ratios in the simulations, this
|
|
entire distribution is unlikely to be observable in many samples. The
|
|
effect of this can be predicted based on the behavior seen in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.A3}. For example, we consider the distribution
|
|
of Eddington ratios that would be observed if the B-band luminosity
|
|
$\LBo\geq\Lcut{11}$, comparable to the selection limits at high
|
|
redshift of many optical quasar samples. As expected from the change
|
|
in $l$ with luminosity, this restricts the observed range of Eddington
|
|
ratios to large values $l\sim0.1-1$, in good agreement with the range
|
|
of Eddington ratios actually observed in such samples. Essentially, it
|
|
has reduced the observed range to a bolometric luminosity
|
|
$L\gtrsim\Lcut{12}$ in the case shown, giving a similar distribution
|
|
to that seen in the lower panel of the figure.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f20.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f18.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted distribution of Eddington ratios based on
|
|
the luminosity function and the quasar evolution in our
|
|
simulations, in two redshift intervals $z<0.5$ (upper left) and
|
|
$1.5<z<3.5$ (upper right). The observed distributions for radio
|
|
loud (black squares) and radio quiet (green circles) quasars are
|
|
shown from \citet{Vestergaard04} with Poisson errors. Thick black
|
|
lines show the predicted distribution given the same minimum
|
|
observed luminosity as the observed sample. Thin red lines show
|
|
the predicted distributions for a sample extending to arbitrarily
|
|
faint luminosities, dotted lines show the same, with the ADAF
|
|
correction of \S~\ref{sec:eddington} applied at low accretion rates.
|
|
Blue dashed lines show the prediction for a fixed (luminosity-independent) Eddington
|
|
ratio distribution in a light-bulb or exponential light curve model, fitted to the
|
|
$z<0.5$ data and used to predict the $1.5<z<3.5$ Eddington ratio distribution
|
|
given the observational luminosity limit. Lower panels
|
|
show the predicted distributions for $z\lessim1$ in two luminosity
|
|
intervals, above and below the ``break'' luminosity in the
|
|
observed luminosity function (red lines here correspond to an
|
|
observed (attenuated) B-band luminosity $\LBo>\Lcut{11}$).
|
|
\label{fig:Pofl.all}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
We compare our predicted distribution of Eddington ratios to
|
|
observations in Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.all}. Using the distribution of
|
|
peak luminosities $\nLp$ determined from the luminosity function, we
|
|
can integrate over all luminosities to infer the observed Eddington
|
|
ratio distribution,
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
% \begin{split}
|
|
% P(l)\propto & \int{{\rm d}\log L}\int{{\rm d}\log\Lp} \\
|
|
% & \times P(l | L, \Lp)\,\frac{{\rm d}t(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L} \nLP .
|
|
% \end{split}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
P(l)&\propto& \int{{\rm d}\log L}\int{{\rm d}\log\Lp} \nonumber\\
|
|
&& \times P(l | L, \Lp)\,\frac{{\rm d}t(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L} \nLP .
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
As our estimate of $P(l | L, \Lp)$ above is rough, we do this by
|
|
binning in $\Lp$ and averaging the binned $P(l | L, \Lp)\,\dtdL$ for
|
|
each simulation in the range of $\Lp$, then weighting by $\nLp$ and
|
|
integrating. We consider both the entire distribution that would be
|
|
observed in the absence of selection effects (red histograms), and
|
|
the distribution observed demanding a B-band luminosity above some
|
|
reference value, $\LBo>L_{\rm min}$ (black histograms). The results are shown
|
|
for redshifts $z<0.5$ and $z=1.5 - 3.5$, along with the observed
|
|
distribution from \citet{Vestergaard04}, with assumed Poisson
|
|
errors. The observations should be compared to the black histograms,
|
|
which have luminosity thresholds $L_{\rm}=\Lcut{10}\ {\rm and}\
|
|
\Lcut{11}$ for $z<0.5$ and $z=1.5 - 3.5$, respectively, corresponding
|
|
approximately to the minimum observable luminosities in the observed
|
|
samples in each redshift interval.
|
|
|
|
The agreement is good, given the observational uncertainties, and it
|
|
suggests that the observed Eddington ratio distribution can be related
|
|
to the non-trivial nature of quasar lifetimes and light curves we
|
|
model, rather than some arbitrary distribution of fixed $l$ across
|
|
sources. However, the selection effects in the observed samples are
|
|
quite significant -- the complete distribution of Eddington ratios is
|
|
similar in both samples, implying that the difference in the observed
|
|
Eddington ratio distribution is primarily a consequence of the higher
|
|
luminosity limit in the observed samples -- and a more detailed test
|
|
of this prediction requires fainter samples.
|
|
|
|
Still, there is a systematic offset in the observed samples at $z<0.5$
|
|
and $z=1.5-3.5$ which does not owe to selection effects. At
|
|
progressively lower redshifts, more quasars with luminosities further
|
|
below the ``break'' in the luminosity function are observed, and
|
|
therefore the observed Eddington ratio is broadened to lower Eddington
|
|
ratios $l\sim0.1$, whereas at high redshift the distribution is more
|
|
peaked at slightly higher Eddington ratios. This difference, although
|
|
not dramatic, is a prediction of our model not captured in ``light
|
|
bulb'' or ``fixed Eddington ratio'' models, even when allowing for a
|
|
distribution of Eddington ratios, if such a distribution is static. We
|
|
demonstrate this by fitting the low-redshift Eddington ratio
|
|
distribution to a Gaussian (blue dashed lines in upper left), and then
|
|
assuming that this distribution of accretion rates is unchanged with
|
|
redshift, giving (after applying the same selection effects which
|
|
yield the black histograms plotted) the blue dashed line in the upper
|
|
right panel. Although the agreement may appear reasonable, the
|
|
difference is significant -- such a fit overpredicts the fraction of
|
|
high redshift objects at Eddington ratios $\lessim0.1$ and
|
|
underpredicts the fraction at $\sim0.3$, giving a somewhat poor fit
|
|
overall ($\reducechi=2.7$, but with typical $\gtrsim3\sigma$
|
|
overpredictions for Eddington ratios $\lesssim0.1$).
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, without being modified to allow for a distribution of
|
|
Eddington ratios, such models are clearly inconsistent with the
|
|
observations, as they would predict a single, constant Eddington
|
|
ratio. However, models which fit the observed evolution in the quasar
|
|
luminosity function with a non-static distribution of accretion rates
|
|
do recover the broadening of the Eddington ratio distribution at low
|
|
redshift, so long as strong evolution in the distribution of accretion
|
|
rates for systems of a given black hole mass is not allowed
|
|
\citep{SW03}, giving a qualitatively similar picture of the evolution
|
|
we model. Regardless of the evolution in accretion rates, an
|
|
advantage of our modeling is that it provides a physically motivated
|
|
predicted distribution of accretion rates, as opposed to being forced
|
|
to adopt the distribution of accretion rates from observational input
|
|
(which can be, as demonstrated in the figure, significantly biased by
|
|
observational selection effects). The dotted histograms show the
|
|
distribution if we apply our ADAF correction to the intrinsic
|
|
distribution, and demonstrate that this does not
|
|
significantly change the result. We note that our model for black
|
|
hole accretion employs the Eddington limit as a maximum accretion
|
|
rate; if we remove this restriction, we find that the simulations
|
|
spend some small but non-negligible time with $l\sim1-2$, which is
|
|
also consistent with the observations.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, we can make a prediction of this model which can be
|
|
falsified, namely that the Eddington ratio distribution at
|
|
luminosities well below the break in the luminosity function should be
|
|
broader and extend to lower values than the distribution at
|
|
luminosities above the break luminosity. We quantify this in the lower
|
|
panels of Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.all}, for the distribution at low
|
|
redshifts $z\lesssim1$. Here we consider two bins in luminosity,
|
|
$L=10^{9.5}-10^{10.5}\,L_{\sun}$ and
|
|
$L=10^{12.5}-10^{13.5}\,L_{\sun}$, for redshifts where the break in
|
|
the luminosity function is at approximately
|
|
$L\sim10^{11}-10^{12}\,L_{\sun}$. Clearly, the distribution is
|
|
broader and extends to lower Eddington ratios in the former
|
|
luminosity interval, whereas in the latter it is strongly peaked about
|
|
$l\sim0.2-1$, for both the complete distribution (black) and that with
|
|
$\LBo\geq\Lcut{11}$ (red). The distribution obtained applying the ADAF
|
|
correction described above is shown as dotted histograms. Despite the
|
|
fact that the Eddington ratio distribution at low luminosities will be
|
|
strongly biased by selection effects, a reasonably complete sample
|
|
should be able to test this prediction, at least qualitatively.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f21.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f18.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted distribution of Eddington ratios based on
|
|
the luminosity function and the quasar evolution in our
|
|
simulations, at three redshifts $z=0.5$ (top panels), $z=1.0$ (middle), and $z=2.0$ (bottom).
|
|
The inferred distribution of Eddington ratios, adopting a constant bolometric
|
|
correction from the observed (attenuated) luminosity in each of three bands is shown,
|
|
i.e.\ assuming $L=12\,L_{B}^{\rm obs}$ ($4400\,$\AA; left),
|
|
$L=52\,L_{SX}^{\rm obs}$ (0.5-2 keV; middle), and
|
|
$L=35\,L_{HX}^{\rm obs}$ (2-10 keV; right). For each waveband, results are shown
|
|
for three reference luminosities. In B-band, $M_{B}<-19$ (red), $M_{B}<-22$ (blue),
|
|
and $M_{B}<-25$ (black). In soft X-rays, $\log(L_{SX} [{\rm erg\,s^{-1}}])>40\ (\rm red),\
|
|
42\ (\rm blue),\ 44\ (\rm black)$. In hard X-rays, $\log(L_{HX} [{\rm erg\,s^{-1}}])>41\ (\rm red),\
|
|
43\ (\rm blue),\ 45\ (\rm black)$.
|
|
\label{fig:Pofl.grid}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
We illustrate the effects of changing observed waveband, redshift, and
|
|
luminosity thresholds on the observed Eddington ratio distribution in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.grid}. Here, we plot the predicted distribution
|
|
of Eddington ratios determined as in Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.all}, from
|
|
our fitted $\nLp$ distribution at each redshift and the distribution
|
|
of Eddington ratios as a function of instantaneous and peak luminosity
|
|
in each of our simulations (specifically, these are drawn from the
|
|
Monte Carlo realizations of the quasar population described in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:discussion}). We show the predictions at three redshifts
|
|
$z=0.5$ (top panels), $z=1.0$ (middle), and $z=2.0$ (bottom). For
|
|
each redshift, results are shown in three wavebands, and with three
|
|
reference luminosities. In B-band, we require $M_{B}<-19$ (red),
|
|
$M_{B}<-22$ (blue), and $M_{B}<-25$ (black). In soft X-rays,
|
|
$\log(L_{SX} [{\rm erg\,s^{-1}}])>40\ (\rm red),\ 42\ (\rm blue),\ 44\
|
|
(\rm black)$. In hard X-rays, $\log(L_{HX} [{\rm erg\,s^{-1}}])>41\
|
|
(\rm red),\ 43\ (\rm blue),\ 45\ (\rm black)$. The observationally
|
|
inferred distribution of Eddington ratios at each redshift is loosely
|
|
estimated by adopting a constant bolometric correction from the
|
|
observed (attenuated) luminosity in each of three bands shown, i.e.\
|
|
assuming $L=12\,L_{B}^{\rm obs}$ ($4400\,$\AA; left),
|
|
$L=52\,L_{SX}^{\rm obs}$ (0.5-2 keV; middle), and $L=35\,L_{HX}^{\rm
|
|
obs}$ (2-10 keV; right). This follows common practice in many
|
|
observational estimates of the Eddington ratio distribution and allows
|
|
for the effects of attenuation, but we caution that it
|
|
can be misleading.
|
|
|
|
If we instead use the luminosity-dependent bolometric corrections of
|
|
\citet{Marconi04} which we adopt throughout, even given that we are
|
|
calculating from the observed (attenuated) luminosities, we do not see
|
|
the large population of highly sub-Eddington (Eddington ratios
|
|
$\lesssim10^{-3}$) quasars in soft and hard X-ray samples with low
|
|
luminosity thresholds. This is because these are actually reasonably
|
|
high-Eddington ratio quasars, %, albeit dim ($L\lessim10^{11}\,L_{\sun}$), quasars,
|
|
but our bolometric corrections imply that a larger fraction
|
|
of the bolometric luminosity is radiated in the X-ray at low
|
|
bolometric luminosity, meaning that assuming a constant bolometric
|
|
correction will underestimate the Eddington ratios of high-bolometric
|
|
luminosity sources. Regardless, the figure illustrates both the importance
|
|
of different wavelengths (i.e.\ the ability to observe more
|
|
low-Eddington ratio sources in X-ray as compared to optical samples)
|
|
and luminosity/magnitude limits on the inferred distribution of
|
|
Eddington ratios. For example, even for relatively deep B-band quasar
|
|
samples complete to $M_{B}<-23$ (i.e.\ complete to essentially all
|
|
objects traditionally classified as having ``quasar-like''
|
|
luminosities), the expected observed Eddington ratio distribution at
|
|
$z\sim0.5-2$ is quite sharply peaked about $\sim0.1-0.3$, in good
|
|
agreement with recent observational results \citep{Kollmeier05}.
|
|
|
|
We do not compare to the $z=0$ distribution of black hole accretion
|
|
rates, as this is dominated by objects at extremely low Eddington
|
|
ratios $l\sim10^{-5}-10^{-4}$
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Ho02,Marchesini04,Jester05}, which are well below the
|
|
range we model, and are not likely to be driven by merger activity
|
|
(many of these objects are quiescent, low-luminosity Seyferts in
|
|
normal spiral galaxy hosts); furthermore, many of these objects are
|
|
not accreting at the Bondi rate
|
|
\citep{FC88,BB99,DiMatteo00,NIA00,QG00,DCF01,Loewenstein01,Bower03},
|
|
clearly showing that our simulations must incorporate more
|
|
sophisticated models for accretion in quiescent, low-luminosity states
|
|
(when gravitational torques cannot provide a mechanism to drive large
|
|
amounts of gas to the central regions of the galaxy) in order to
|
|
describe such phases.
|
|
|
|
However, it has been suggested that the rapid ``blowout'' phase and
|
|
subsequent decay in accretion rates seen in our simulations, coupled
|
|
with spectral modeling of radiatively inefficient accretion modes, can
|
|
explain the apparently bimodal distribution of low-redshift accretion
|
|
rates \citep{CX05}. Moreover, present-day, relaxed ellipticals are
|
|
observed to have mass accretion rates $\sim10^{-4}$ implying a long
|
|
relaxation time at moderate and low accretion rates, qualitatively
|
|
similar to that seen after the ``blowout'' in our modeling (Hopkins et
|
|
al. 2005f). A pure exponential decay in accretion rate after the peak
|
|
quasar phase would give $\dot{m}=\dot{M}/\dot{M}_{\rm
|
|
Edd}\sim\exp{(-t_{H}/t_{Q})}$ at present, where $t_{H}$ is the Hubble
|
|
time and $t_{Q}$ is the quasar lifetime of order e.g.\ the Salpeter
|
|
time $t_{S}=4\times10^{7}$\,yr, yielding an unreasonably low expected
|
|
accretion rate $\dot{m}\sim10^{-145}$. Even assuming an order of
|
|
magnitude larger quasar lifetime, this gives $\dot{m}\sim10^{-15}$,
|
|
far below observed values, implying that regardless of the fueling
|
|
mechanisms at low luminosities, the basic key point of our modeling
|
|
must be true to some extent, namely that quasars spend long times
|
|
relaxing at moderate to low Eddington ratios.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\section{The Mass Function of Relic Supermassive Black Holes from Quasars}
|
|
\label{sec:smbh}
|
|
|
|
From the $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma$ relation and other host galaxy-black
|
|
hole scalings,
|
|
estimates of bulge and spheroid velocity dispersions have been used to
|
|
determine the total mass density ($\rhobh$) and mass distribution of
|
|
local, primarily inactive supermassive black holes
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Salucci99,MS02,YT02,Ferrarese02,AR02,Marconi04,Shankar04}.
|
|
These estimates, along with others based on X-ray background synthesis
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{FI99,ERZ02}, have compared these quantities to those
|
|
expected based on the mass distribution of `relic' black holes grown
|
|
in quasars. It appears that most, and perhaps nearly all of the
|
|
present-day black hole mass density was accumulated in bright quasar
|
|
phases, and the $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ and $M_{\rm BH}-L_{\rm bulge}$
|
|
correlations yield estimates of the local mass function in good
|
|
agreement with those from hard X-ray AGN luminosity functions
|
|
\citep{Marconi04}.
|
|
|
|
However, this modeling is dependent on several assumptions. Namely,
|
|
the average radiative efficiency $\epsilon_{r}$, Eddington ratio $l$,
|
|
and average quasar lifetime $t_{Q}$ are generally taken to be
|
|
constants and either input into the model or constrained by demanding
|
|
agreement with the local mass function. In our simulations, we find
|
|
the quasar lifetime and Eddington ratio to be complex functions of
|
|
both luminosity and host system properties (as opposed to being
|
|
constants). We also find that quasars spend a large fraction of their
|
|
lives in obscured growth phases, suggesting some mass gain outside of
|
|
the bright quasar phase. It is thus of interest to determine the relic
|
|
black hole mass function expected from our model for quasar evolution.
|
|
|
|
Using our estimate for the birthrate of quasars with a given peak
|
|
luminosity at a particular redshift, $\nLp$, obtained from the
|
|
luminosity function in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}, we can estimate the total
|
|
number density of relic quasars accumulated by a particular redshift
|
|
that were born with a given $\Lp$ (per logarithmic interval in $\Lp$)
|
|
from
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
n(\Lp)=\int{\,\nLp\,{\rm d}t}=\int{\frac{\dot{n}(\Lp,z)\,{\rm d}z}{(1+z)H(z)}}.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
By redshift $z=0$, most of these quasars will be ``dead,'' with only
|
|
a small residual fraction having been activated in the recent past.
|
|
|
|
Using our log-normal form for $\nLp$, with normalization $\nstar$ and
|
|
dispersion $\sstar$ held constant and only the median
|
|
$\lstar=\lstar^{0}\,\exp{(k_{L}\tau)}$ evolving with redshift, this
|
|
integral can be evaluated numerically to give the space density of
|
|
relic quasars $n(\Lp)$. Finally, we use $\mbhf(\Lp)$, roughly the
|
|
Eddington mass of the given peak luminosity (but determined more
|
|
precisely in \S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}) to convert from ${\rm
|
|
d}n(\Lp)/{\rm d}\log\Lp$ to ${\rm d}n(M_{\rm BH})/{\rm d}\log M_{\rm
|
|
BH}$. This formulation implicitly assumes that black holes do not
|
|
undergo subsequent mergers after the initial quasar-producing event.
|
|
However, this effect should be small (a factor $\lesssim2$) as
|
|
subsequent mergers would be dry (gas poor).
|
|
We explicitly calculate the effects of dry mergers on the
|
|
spheroid mass function (essentially a rescaling of the black hole mass
|
|
function calculated here) in \citet{H05e}, and show that this is a
|
|
small effect (significantly less than the uncertainties owing to our
|
|
fit to the quasar luminosity function) even assuming the maximum dry
|
|
merger rates of e.g.\ \citet{vanDokkum05}.
|
|
|
|
This mass function can then be integrated over $d M_{\rm BH}$ to give
|
|
the total present-day black hole mass density, $\rhobh$. Neglecting
|
|
temporarily the small corrections to $\mbhf(\Lp)$ from
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}, we expect
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\mbhf\approx M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)=\frac{\Lp\,t_{S}}{\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}
|
|
%2.95\times 10^{-5} M_{\sun} \, \Bigl( \frac{\Lp}{L_{\sun}}\Bigr),
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $t_{S}/\epsilon_{r}c^{2}\approx2.95\times10^{-5}\,M_{\sun}/L_{\sun}$,
|
|
so therefore,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\rhobh=\frac{t_{S}}{\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}\int{\Lp\,n(\Lp)\,{\rm d}\log \Lp}.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
This can be combined with the integral over redshift for $n(\Lp)$,
|
|
giving, at each $z$, a pure Gaussian integral over $\log{(\Lp)}$,
|
|
in the form
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
%\begin{split}
|
|
%\rhobh &=\frac{\lstar^{0}\,t_{S}}{\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}\frac{\nstar}{H_{0}}\,
|
|
%e^{\frac{1}{2}(\sstar \ln{10})^{2}}\,\int{\frac{e^{k_{L}\tau}\,dz}{(1+z)\,\hat{H}(z)}}\\
|
|
%&= \frac{\lstar^{0}\,t_{S}}{k_{L}\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}\frac{\nstar}{H_{0}}\,
|
|
%e^{\frac{1}{2}(\sstar \ln{10})^{2}}\,\Bigl(e^{k_{L}\tau_{f}}-e^{k_{L}\tau}\Bigr),
|
|
%\end{split}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
\rhobh &=&\frac{\lstar^{0}\,t_{S}}{\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}\frac{\nstar}{H_{0}}\,
|
|
e^{\frac{1}{2}(\sstar \ln{10})^{2}}\,\int{\frac{e^{k_{L}\tau}\,dz}{(1+z)\,\hat{H}(z)}}\nonumber\\
|
|
&=& \frac{\lstar^{0}\,t_{S}}{k_{L}\epsilon_{r}c^{2}}\frac{\nstar}{H_{0}}\,
|
|
e^{\frac{1}{2}(\sstar \ln{10})^{2}}\,\Bigl(e^{k_{L}\tau_{f}}-e^{k_{L}\tau}\Bigr),
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
where $\hat{H}(z)\equiv H(z)/H_{0}$ and $\tau_{f}$ is the fractional
|
|
lookback time at some upper limit. We must modify this integral above
|
|
$z\sim2$ to account for the decreasing space density of bright
|
|
quasars, applying either our density or peak-luminosity evolution
|
|
turnover from \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}, but quasars at these high redshifts
|
|
contribute only a small fraction to the present-day density. Thus, in
|
|
this formulation, the evolution of the total supermassive black hole
|
|
mass density, i.e.\ $\rhobh(z)/\rhobh(z=0)$, is given approximately by
|
|
the dimensionless integral above, and depends only on how
|
|
$\lstar$ evolves, essentially the rate at which the break
|
|
in the quasar luminosity function shifts. Although this is not strictly
|
|
true if we include corrections to $\mbhf(\Lp)$ based on $\Lp$, the
|
|
difference is small and this behavior is essentially preserved. Note
|
|
that the total supermassive black hole mass density is independent of
|
|
corrections from subsequent dry mergers, which (being gas poor) conserve
|
|
total black hole mass.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f22.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f19.ps}
|
|
\caption{Right: Total predicted quasar relic black hole mass
|
|
density and evolution of the fractional black hole mass
|
|
density with redshift. Dotted lines show the difference resulting
|
|
from $1\sigma$ deviation in fitted $\nLp$ from the luminosity
|
|
function. Left: Predicted present $z=0$ relic mass function
|
|
(thick black line), for comparison with the $1\sigma$ range
|
|
(yellow) of the inferred supermassive black hole mass function
|
|
from \citet{Marconi04}. Also shown are the results given $1\sigma$
|
|
errors in the fitted $\nLp$ distribution (dotted lines), or ignoring
|
|
the small corrections to $\mbhf(\Lp)$ from \S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}
|
|
(thin black line). Dot-dashed lines show the predicted mass
|
|
function at $z=1.5,\,3.0,\,5.0$ (blue, green, and red,
|
|
respectively). The extensions to $z>2$ includes the turnover (pure
|
|
peak luminosity evolution form) in the quasar space density above
|
|
$z=2$ from high-redshift luminosity functions described in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:fullLF}, except for the dashed green and red lines
|
|
which use the pure density evolution form.
|
|
\label{fig:SMBH.distrib}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.distrib} shows our prediction for the mass
|
|
distribution of supermassive black holes, as well as the total density
|
|
$\rhobh$ and its evolution with redshift. We find a total relic black
|
|
hole mass density of
|
|
$\rhobh=2.9^{+2.3}_{-1.2}\times10^{5}\,M_{\sun}\,{\rm Mpc^{-3}}$, in
|
|
agreement with the observational estimate of
|
|
$\rhobh=2.9\pm0.5\,h^{2}_{0.7}\times10^{5}\,M_{\sun}\,{\rm Mpc^{-3}}$,
|
|
by \citet{YT02} ($h_{0.7}\equiv H_{0}/70\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}\,Mpc^{-1}}$;
|
|
their result is converted from $h=0.65$), and within $1\sigma$ of the
|
|
value $\rhobh=4.6^{+1.9}_{-1.4}h^{2}_{0.7}\times10^{5}\,M_{\sun}\,{\rm
|
|
Mpc^{-3}}$, of \citet{Marconi04}, based on the observations of
|
|
\citet{Marzke94}, \citet{Kochanek01}, \citet{Nakamura03},
|
|
\citet{Bernardi03}, and \citet{Sheth03}. The fractional evolution of
|
|
$\rhobh$ with redshift is quite well constrained, and we find, as with
|
|
previous estimates, that most of the present-day black hole mass
|
|
density accumulates at moderate to low redshifts
|
|
$z\approx 0.5 - 2.5$. The $1\sigma$
|
|
errors are shown as dotted lines in the figure, and are close to our
|
|
best-fit estimate, as we have demonstrated that this quantity depends
|
|
only on $k_{L}$, the rate of evolution of the break in
|
|
the luminosity function
|
|
with redshift, which is fairly well-constrained by
|
|
observations (from our fitting to the luminosity functions,
|
|
$k_{L}=5.61\pm0.28$). The difference in $\rhobh$ if we include or
|
|
neglect the small corrections to $\mbhf$ is negligible compared to our
|
|
errors ($\sim5\%$).
|
|
|
|
Our estimate for the relic black hole mass distribution (thick black
|
|
line) also agrees well with observational estimates, with all
|
|
observations within the range allowed by the $1\sigma$ errors of our
|
|
fitting to the luminosity function (dotted lines). The observations
|
|
shown are again from \citet{Marconi04}, based on the combination of
|
|
observations by \citet{Marzke94}, \citet{Kochanek01},
|
|
\citet{Nakamura03}, \citet{Bernardi03}, and \citet{Sheth03}. The high
|
|
mass end of the black hole mass function $M_{\rm BH}>10^{9}\,M_{\sun}$
|
|
is relatively sensitive to whether or not we apply the $\mbhf(\Lp)$
|
|
corrections of \S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare}, instead of taking
|
|
$\mbhf=M_{\rm Edd}(\Lp)$ (thin line), as well as to our fitting
|
|
procedure. However, the agreement is still good, and this is also
|
|
where the observational estimates of the mass distribution are most
|
|
uncertain, as they are generally extrapolated to these masses, and are
|
|
sensitive to the assumed intrinsic dispersions in the $M_{\rm
|
|
BH}-\sigma$ and $M_{\rm BH}-L_{\rm bulge}$ relations \citep{YT02}.
|
|
|
|
If, instead, we adopt a light-bulb, constant Eddington ratio, or
|
|
exponential light curve model for quasar evolution, we would have
|
|
$M_{\rm BH}^{f}\propto \Lp$, and thus the prediction would be similar
|
|
to the thin black line shown, a somewhat worse fit at high black hole
|
|
masses. However, in these models this can be remedied by adjusting the
|
|
typical Eddington ratios, quasar lifetimes, or radiative
|
|
efficiencies. We do not show the range of predictions of these models
|
|
for the relic supermassive black hole mass function, as they have been
|
|
examined in detail previously
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Salucci99,MS02,YT02,Ferrarese02,AR02,Marconi04,Shankar04}.
|
|
These works demonstrate that the observed quasar luminosity functions
|
|
are consistent with the relic supermassive black hole mass function,
|
|
given typical radiative efficiencies $\epsilon_{r}\sim0.1$ and
|
|
Eddington ratios $\sim0.5-1.0$, and that most of the mass of black
|
|
holes is accumulated in bright, observed phases, or else the required
|
|
radiative efficiency would violate theoretical limits.
|
|
|
|
That our model of quasar lifetimes and obscuration reproduces the
|
|
observed $z=0$ supermassive black hole mass function explicitly
|
|
demonstrates that we are consistent with these constraints. By
|
|
choice, the radiative efficiency in our simulations is
|
|
$\epsilon_{r}=0.1$, and accretion rates are not allowed to exceed
|
|
Eddington. As noted in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}, most of the black hole mass
|
|
is accumulated and radiant energy released in the final, ``blowout''
|
|
phase of quasar evolution, and here our black hole mass function and
|
|
cumulative black hole mass density demonstrate that our modeling is
|
|
consistent with integrated energy and mass arguments such as that of
|
|
\citet{Soltan82}, despite the fact that quasars spend more {\em time}
|
|
in obscured phases than they do in bright optical quasar phases. In
|
|
fact, comparison of our predicted total black hole mass density with
|
|
estimates from the $z=0$ black hole mass distribution allows some
|
|
latitude for significant mass gain in radiatively inefficient growth
|
|
or black holes in small, disky spheroids, although we emphasize that
|
|
this is mainly because the uncertainty in our prediction is large, it
|
|
is not inherent or necessary in our modeling.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
%\epsscale{1.1}
|
|
\plotone{f23.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f20.ps}
|
|
\caption{Fractional number
|
|
density $n(M,\,z)/n(M,\,z=0)$ of black holes of a given mass as a function of
|
|
redshift, for several different black hole masses as shown. For
|
|
$z>2$ this includes the turnover (pure density evolution
|
|
form) in the quasar space density above $z=2$ from high-redshift
|
|
luminosity functions described in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}.
|
|
Left panel shows the results using our full model of quasar lifetimes,
|
|
right panel assuming a ``light-bulb'' or exponential (constant
|
|
Eddington ratio) light curve model.
|
|
The yellow dot-dash ($10^{9}\,M_{\sun}$) and red triple-dot-dash
|
|
($10^{10}\,M_{\sun}$) curves are nearly identical in the right panel.
|
|
\label{fig:SMBH.evol}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
The anti-hierarchical nature of black hole formation, where less
|
|
massive black holes are formed at lower redshift, is reflected in our
|
|
modeling by the shift of the break in the quasar luminosity function
|
|
to lower values with decreasing redshift. This can be seen in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.distrib}, where the black hole mass distributions
|
|
are shown at redshifts $z=1.5,\,3.0\ {\rm and}\ 5.0$, assuming either
|
|
pure peak luminosity evolution or pure density evolution for $z>2$
|
|
(dot-dashed and dashed, respectively). While the choice for the
|
|
turnover in the $z>2$ quasar density matters little for the $z<2$
|
|
black hole mass functions, the low-$M_{\rm BH}$ distribution at high
|
|
redshift (where observations do not constrain $\nLp$ well) is quite
|
|
different between the two models. Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.evol} plots
|
|
the fractional number density of black holes of a given mass as a
|
|
function of redshift, i.e.\ $n(M,\,z)/n(M,\,z=0)$, where $n(M)={\rm
|
|
d}n/{\rm d}\log{(M)}$ is just the number density at mass $M$. This
|
|
figure demonstrates that higher-mass black holes originated over a
|
|
larger range of redshifts, and that they mostly formed
|
|
at higher redshift, compared to lower-mass black holes.
|
|
|
|
The right panel of Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.evol} compares our prediction
|
|
to that of a light-bulb or exponential light curve model for quasar
|
|
lifetimes. In these models, the anti-hierarchical nature of black
|
|
hole assembly is dramatically suppressed. At the high-mass end, there
|
|
is no measurable difference in the distribution of formation redshifts
|
|
(i.e.\ the $M_{\rm BH}=10^{9}\,M_{\sun}$ and $M_{\rm
|
|
BH}=10^{10}\,M_{\sun}$ curves are indistinguishable), and there is
|
|
little change in the formation times at $M_{\rm BH}=10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$.
|
|
The shift in formation redshift at lower masses, although significant,
|
|
is smaller than that predicted in our model. If spheroids and black
|
|
holes are produced together, as in our picture, these models of the
|
|
quasar lifetime would imply that spheroids of masses $M_{\rm
|
|
vir}\sim10^{11}-10^{13}\,M_{\sun}$ all formed over nearly identical
|
|
ranges of redshifts, which is inconsistent with many observations
|
|
indicating anti-hierarchical growth of the red, elliptical galaxy
|
|
population \citep[e.g.,][]{Treu01,vanDokkum01,Treu02,
|
|
vDS03,Gebhardt03,Rusin03,vandeVen03,Wuyts04,Treu05,Holden05,
|
|
vdW05,SA05,Nelan05}. Implications of our model for the red galaxy
|
|
sequence are considered in \citet{H05e}, where we show that this
|
|
weaker anti-hierarchical black hole (and correspondingly, spheroid)
|
|
evolution is inconsistent with observed luminosity functions,
|
|
color-magnitude relations, and mass-to-light ratios of elliptical
|
|
galaxies.
|
|
|
|
Our modeling reproduces the observed total density and mass
|
|
distribution of supermassive black holes at $z=0$ with black holes
|
|
accreting at the canonical efficiency $\epsilon_{r}=0.1$ expected for
|
|
efficient accretion through a \citet{SS73} disk. Presumably, a large
|
|
change in $\epsilon_{r}$ would give a significantly different relation
|
|
between peak luminosity and black hole mass (for the same $\Lp$,
|
|
$M_{\rm BH}^{f}\propto 1/\epsilon_{r}$), and thus if the quasar
|
|
lifetime remained similar as a function of peak luminosity, this would
|
|
translate to a shift in the black hole mass function. The long
|
|
obscured stage in black hole evolution does not generate problems in
|
|
reproducing the black hole mass density, and the final phases of
|
|
growth are still in bright optical quasar stages. However, a large
|
|
Compton-thick population of black holes at all luminosities (or even
|
|
at some range of luminosities at or above the break in the luminosity
|
|
function) \citep[e.g.,][]{Gilli01,Ueda03}, or a large population
|
|
accreting in a radiatively inefficient ADAF-type solution,
|
|
as invoked to explain discrepancies in the X-ray
|
|
background produced by synthesis models \citep{DEFN99}, would result in a significant
|
|
over-prediction of the present-day supermassive black hole density.
|
|
As we demonstrate in \S~\ref{sec:xrb.tot}, invoking such populations
|
|
is unnecessary, as our picture for quasar lifetimes and evolutionary
|
|
obscuration self-consistently reproduces the observed X-ray
|
|
background.
|
|
|
|
Finally, we note that we reproduce the $z=0$ distribution of black
|
|
hole masses {\em inferred} from the distribution of spheroid velocity
|
|
dispersions \citep{Sheth03} and luminosity functions
|
|
\citep{Marzke94,Kochanek01,Nakamura03}, based on the observed $M_{\rm
|
|
BH}-\sigma$ relation and fundamental plane for galaxy properties
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Bernardi03,Gebhardt03}. Therefore, since our modeling
|
|
also reproduces the observed $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$
|
|
\citep{DSH05,Robertson05b} and fundamental plane (Robertson et al., in
|
|
preparation) relations, we implicitly reproduce the $z=0$ distribution
|
|
of spheroid velocity dispersions and spheroid luminosity functions,
|
|
given our basic assumption that the mergers that produce these
|
|
spheroids also give rise to luminous quasar activity.
|
|
|
|
\section{The Cosmic X-Ray Background}
|
|
\label{sec:xrb}
|
|
\subsection{The Integrated Spectra of Individual Quasars}
|
|
\label{sec:xrb.indiv}
|
|
|
|
Unresolved extragalactic sources, specifically obscured AGN, have been
|
|
invoked to explain the cosmic X-ray background \citep[e.g,][]{SW89}.
|
|
This picture has been confirmed as deep surveys with {\it Chandra} and
|
|
{\it XMM-Newton} have resolved most or all of the X-ray background
|
|
into discrete sources, primarily obscured and unobscured AGN
|
|
\citep{Brandt01,Hasinger01,Rosati02,Giacconi02,Baldi02}. The X-ray
|
|
background, however, has a harder X-ray spectrum than typical quasars,
|
|
with a photon index $\Gamma\sim1.4$ in the $1-10$\,keV range
|
|
\citep{Marshall80}. Therefore, obscured AGN are important in
|
|
producing this shape, as absorption in the ultraviolent and soft
|
|
X-rays hardens the observed spectrum. Indeed, population synthesis
|
|
models based on observed quasar luminosity functions and involving
|
|
large numbers of obscured AGN have been successful at matching both
|
|
the X-ray background intensity and spectral shape
|
|
\citep{Madau94,Comastri95,Gilli99,Gilli01}. However, these models make
|
|
arbitrary assumptions about the ratio of obscured to unobscured
|
|
sources and its evolution with redshift, choosing these quantities to
|
|
reproduce the X-ray background. Furthermore, as X-ray surveys have
|
|
been extended to higher redshifts, it has become clear that both the
|
|
observed redshift distribution of X-ray sources and the ratio of
|
|
obscured to unobscured sources is inconsistent with that required by
|
|
these models \citep{Hasinger02,Barger03}. Even synthesis models based
|
|
on higher-redshift X-ray surveys and using observationally derived
|
|
ratios of obscured to unobscured sources \citep[e.g.,][]{Ueda03} have
|
|
invoked ad hoc assumptions about additional populations of obscured
|
|
sources to reproduce the X-ray background shape and intensity.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure*}
|
|
\centering
|
|
\plotone{f24.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f21.ps}
|
|
\caption{Left: Integrated intrinsic spectra (thick solid lines)
|
|
from simulations A1, A2, A3, A4, and A5 (black, blue, green,
|
|
yellow, red, respectively), with virial velocities $\vvir=80,\, 113,\,
|
|
160,\, 226,\, {\rm and}\ 320\,{\rm km\,s^{-1}}$. The predicted
|
|
integrated spectra from our model for quasar lifetimes are shown
|
|
as dot-dashed lines, and the prediction of a ``light bulb''
|
|
model, where the same total energy is radiated at $L=\Lp$, as
|
|
dashed lines. Integrated observed spectra are shown as thin solid
|
|
lines. Right: Integrated observed X-ray spectrum from the A3
|
|
simulation (thick black line), compared with the integrated
|
|
intrinsic spectrum, reddened by various column density
|
|
distributions: our fitted \NH\ distributions from \S~\ref{sec:NHfunction}
|
|
(thick black dashed line), constant (luminosity-independent) lognormal
|
|
\NH\ distribution with $\meanNH=10^{22}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$ and
|
|
$\sigNH=0.4,\,0.7,\,1.0$ (blue, green, and red dashed lines,
|
|
respectively), and constant
|
|
$\nh=10^{21},\,10^{21.5},\,10^{22},\,10^{22.5},\ {\rm and}\ 10^{23}\
|
|
{\rm cm^{-2}}$ (thin dot-dashed lines).
|
|
\label{fig:integ.spectra}}
|
|
\end{figure*}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
We can test our model by examining whether the quasar luminosity
|
|
function, relic AGN mass distribution, and X-ray background can be
|
|
simultaneously reproduced in a self-consistent manner. Because our
|
|
formulation describes the birthrate of quasars with a peak luminosity
|
|
$\Lp$, it is most useful to consider the integrated energy spectrum of
|
|
such a quasar over its lifetime,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nu E_{\nu} = \int{{\rm d}t\,\nu L_{\nu}(t)} = \int{\nu f_{\nu}(L)
|
|
L\,\frac{{\rm d}t(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L}\,{\rm d}\log L},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $f_{\nu}(L)$ is the bolometric correction ($L_{\nu}\equiv
|
|
f_{\nu}\,L$). As an example,
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:integ.spectra} shows the integrated
|
|
intrinsic spectra (thick solid lines) from the simulations
|
|
A1, A2, A3, A4, and A5,
|
|
described in \S~\ref{sec:sims}. The final black hole masses for these
|
|
simulations are
|
|
$\mbhf=7\times10^{6},\,3\times10^{7},\,3\times10^{8},\,7\times10^{8},\,{\rm
|
|
and}\ 2\times10^{9}\, M_{\sun}$,
|
|
respectively. The integrated spectral shape in the
|
|
X-ray, in particular, is ultimately determined by the observationally
|
|
motivated bolometric corrections of \citet{Marconi04}, with a
|
|
reflection component in the X-ray determined following \citet{MZ95},
|
|
and, in the case of the observed spectrum, the distribution of column
|
|
densities calculated from the simulations. Using our fits
|
|
to the lifetime $\dtdL$ as a function of instantaneous and peak
|
|
luminosities, we can calculate the expected $\nu E_{\nu}$ from the
|
|
integral above. These integrated spectra are shown as the dot-dashed
|
|
lines in the figure, and agree well with the actual integrated spectra
|
|
of the simulations, demonstrating the self-consistency of our model
|
|
and applicability of our fitted lifetimes.
|
|
|
|
This can be compared to idealized models for the quasar lifetime,
|
|
where we allow the quasar to radiate just at its peak luminosity
|
|
$\Lp\approx L_{\rm Edd}(\mbhf)$ for some fixed lifetime
|
|
$t_{Q}^{0}$. We determine $t_{Q}^{0}$ by demanding that the total
|
|
energetics be correct, $\Lp t_{Q}^{0} = \epsilon_{r}\mbhf c^{2}$. The
|
|
predicted integrated energy spectra are shown as the dashed lines, and
|
|
under-predict the soft and hard X-ray energy output by a factor
|
|
$\sim1.5-2$. This is because higher-luminosity quasars tend to have a
|
|
larger fraction of their energy radiated in the UV-optical rather than
|
|
the X-ray \citep[e.g.,][]{Wilkes94,Green95,VBS03,Strateva05},
|
|
reflected in our bolometric corrections. Thus, assuming that the
|
|
quasar spends all its time at $\Lp$ does not account for extended
|
|
times at lower luminosity, where the ratio of X-ray to total
|
|
luminosity is higher, which would generate an integrated spectrum with
|
|
a larger fraction of its energy in the X-ray. Assuming that the quasar
|
|
undergoes pure Eddington-limited growth to its peak luminosity
|
|
produces an almost identical integrated spectrum to this light-bulb
|
|
model, as it is similarly dominated by $L\sim\Lp$.
|
|
|
|
Of course, the intrinsic integrated energy spectrum of the simulations
|
|
is not what determines the X-ray background, but rather the integrated
|
|
{\em observed} spectrum is the critical quantity. This is shown as the
|
|
thin lines in the left panel of Figure~\ref{fig:integ.spectra}, and in
|
|
detail for our fiducial A3 simulation in the right panel of the figure
|
|
(thick solid line). Along a given sightline, the observed integrated
|
|
spectrum will be
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nu \frac{{\rm d} E_{\nu}}{{\rm d}\Omega}=\int{{\rm d}t\,\nu \frac{L_{\nu}(t)}{4\pi}\,e^{-\tau_{\nu}(\Omega,\,t)}},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $\tau_{\nu}$ is the optical depth at a given frequency.
|
|
We can integrate over solid angle and obtain
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
\nu E_{\nu,\,{\rm obs}} = \int{\nu f_{\nu}\EV{e^{-\tau_{\nu}}}\,
|
|
L\,\frac{{\rm d}t(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L}\,{\rm d}\log L},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
where $\EV{e^{-\tau_{\nu}}}$ is the averaged $e^{-\tau_{\nu}}$ over
|
|
the column density distribution $P(\nh | L,\Lp)$. Using our fits to
|
|
the column density distribution and quasar lifetimes and calculating
|
|
$\nu E_{\nu,\,{\rm obs}}$ as above, we reproduce the integrated
|
|
observed spectrum quite well (black dashed line). For
|
|
comparison, we show that it is not a good approximation to redden the
|
|
spectrum with a constant \NH, giving the results for
|
|
$\nh=10^{21},10^{21.5},10^{22},10^{22.5},\ {\rm and}\ 10^{23}\ {\rm
|
|
cm^{-2}}$ (thin dot-dashed lines). Even allowing for a distribution
|
|
of \NH\ values, the resulting spectrum is a poor match to the observed
|
|
one if that distribution is taken to be static (i.e.\
|
|
luminosity-independent, as in traditional torus models, for
|
|
example). We show the results of reddening the intrinsic spectrum by
|
|
such a (Gaussian) distribution, varying the dispersion $\sigNH=0.4,\,0.7,\,1.0$
|
|
(blue, green, and red dashed lines, respectively), for a median column
|
|
density $\meanNH=10^{22}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$, the median column density
|
|
expected around $\Lp$ in this simulation. Therefore, the luminosity and host system
|
|
property dependence of both quasar lifetimes and the column density
|
|
distribution must be accounted for in attempting to properly predict
|
|
the X-ray background spectrum from observations of the quasar
|
|
luminosity function. Finally, note that the hard cutoff in the
|
|
observed UV spectra at 912\AA\ owes to our calculated cross-sections
|
|
being incomplete in the extreme UV. Properly modeling the escape
|
|
fraction and observed emission at these frequencies, while not
|
|
important for the X-ray background, is critical to calculating the
|
|
contribution of quasars to reionization, and requires a more
|
|
detailed modeling of scattering and absorption, especially in the
|
|
bright optical quasar phase.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{The Integrated X-Ray Background}
|
|
\label{sec:xrb.tot}
|
|
|
|
Given the volume emissivity $j_{\nu}(z)$ (per unit {\em
|
|
comoving} volume) of some isotropic process at a given frequency at
|
|
redshift $z$, the resulting background specific intensity at frequency
|
|
$\nu_{0}$ at $z=0$ is \citep{Peacock99}
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
I_{\nu_{0}} = \frac{c}{4\pi}
|
|
\int{\frac{j_{\nu}[(1+z)\nu_{0},z]}{(1+z)H(z)}} {\rm d}z.
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
If we were to consider the emissivity $j_{\nu}$ per unit
|
|
physical volume, there would be an extra factor of $(1+z)^{-3}$ in the
|
|
integral above. In \S~\ref{sec:xrb.indiv}, we determined the
|
|
integrated observed energy $E_{\nu,\, \rm obs}(\Lp)$ produced by a
|
|
quasar with peak luminosity $\Lp$. We have also inferred $\nLp(z)$
|
|
in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}, the rate at which quasars of peak luminosity
|
|
$\Lp$ are created per unit comoving volume per unit cosmological
|
|
time. Therefore, the comoving volume emissivity is just
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
j_{\nu}(z) = \int{E_{\nu,\, \rm obs}(\Lp)\,\nLp\,d\log \Lp},
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
or, expanding $E_{\nu,\, \rm obs}$,
|
|
%\begin{equation}
|
|
%\begin{split}
|
|
%j_{\nu}(z) = & \int{d\log \Lp\int{d\log L}} \\
|
|
% & \times f_{\nu}\EV{e^{-\tau_{\nu}}}\, L\,\frac{dt(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L}\,\nLp.
|
|
%\end{split}
|
|
%\end{equation}
|
|
\begin{eqnarray}
|
|
j_{\nu}(z)& = & \int{d\log \Lp\int{d\log L}} \nonumber\\
|
|
&& \times f_{\nu}\EV{e^{-\tau_{\nu}}}\, L\,\frac{dt(L,\Lp)}{{\rm d}\log L}\,\nLp.
|
|
\end{eqnarray}
|
|
If the column density distribution were independent of
|
|
$\Lp$, as is assumed in even luminosity-dependent torus models or
|
|
observationally determined \NH\ functions used for X-ray background
|
|
synthesis \citep[e.g.,][]{Ueda03}, then we could combine terms in
|
|
$\Lp$ and integrate over them. This simplification, along with the
|
|
definition of the luminosity function in terms of $\Lp$, gives the
|
|
more traditional formula for the X-ray background in terms of only the
|
|
observed column density distribution and luminosity function,
|
|
\begin{equation}
|
|
j_{\nu}(z) = \int{d\log L\,\frac{d\Phi}{d\log L} L_{\nu}\EV{e^{-\tau_{\nu}}}}.
|
|
\label{eq:simple.XRB}
|
|
\end{equation}
|
|
However, as we showed in \S~\ref{sec:NHdistrib} and
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:xrb.indiv}, neglecting the dependence on $\Lp$ is not a
|
|
good approximation at all luminosities and gives an inaccurate
|
|
estimate of the integrated quasar spectrum; therefore, ``purely
|
|
observation-based'' synthesis models of the X-ray background will be
|
|
inaccurate in a similar manner to synthesis models with an
|
|
inappropriate model for the quasar lifetime. Essentially, this
|
|
``averages out'' the varying distribution of column densities with
|
|
$\Lp$, which changes the shape of the spectrum in a non-linear manner,
|
|
especially when integrated over varying bolometric corrections as
|
|
shown above.
|
|
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
\begin{figure}
|
|
\centering
|
|
%\epsscale{.7}
|
|
\plotone{f25.ps}
|
|
%\includegraphics[width=3.7in]{f22.ps}
|
|
\caption{Predicted integrated X-ray background spectrum (solid
|
|
black line) from our model of quasar lifetimes and attenuation,
|
|
with the peak luminosity distribution $\nLp$ determined from the
|
|
luminosity function. Blue and red thick lines show the observed spectrum
|
|
from \citet{Barcons00} and \citet{Gruber99}, respectively. The
|
|
shaded yellow area illustrates the uncertainty in normalization
|
|
between both samples (alternatively, $2\sigma$ errors in the
|
|
Barcons et al.\ 2000 normalization). The predictions given
|
|
$1\sigma$ deviations in the fitted $\nLp$ distribution (dotted
|
|
lines) and given the $\nLp$ distribution determined from hard
|
|
X-ray data only (dashed line) are shown in the upper panel. Middle
|
|
panel shows the prediction using our modeling of quasar lifetimes
|
|
but different models of obscuration, lower panel the prediction with a
|
|
``light-bulb'' or exponential (constant Eddington ratio) model
|
|
and different obscuration models.
|
|
\label{fig:XRB.spectrum}}
|
|
\end{figure}
|
|
%\clearpage
|
|
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:XRB.spectrum} (upper panel) shows the predicted X-ray
|
|
background spectrum from our full modeling of quasar lifetimes and
|
|
obscuration (solid lines). We use our analytical fits to the quasar
|
|
lifetime and column density distributions as in \S~\ref{sec:xrb.indiv}
|
|
above, as Figure~\ref{fig:integ.spectra} demonstrates that they
|
|
accurately reproduce the actual integrated quasar X-ray spectra of the
|
|
simulations, and the analytical forms are integrated over all
|
|
luminosities and redshifts. The dotted lines show the deviation
|
|
resulting from shifting the parameters describing our fitted $\nLp$
|
|
distribution by $1\sigma$ in either direction, although degeneracies
|
|
in the parameters suggest that the actual uncertainty in the
|
|
background prediction is smaller. The dashed line shows the predicted
|
|
X-ray background if we ignore the broadening of the \NH\ distribution
|
|
across simulations ($\sigNH=1.2$) and instead consider only the
|
|
dispersion of an individual simulation at a given luminosity
|
|
($\sigNH=0.4$).
|
|
|
|
These can be compared to the observations of \citet{Gruber99} (red
|
|
curve, for $E\geq3\,{\rm keV}$) and \citet{Barcons00} (cyan curve, for
|
|
$E\leq10\,{\rm keV}$). We increase the normalization of the
|
|
\citet{Gruber99} spectrum to match that of the best estimate from
|
|
\citet{Barcons00} over the range of overlap, determined from combined
|
|
{\it ASCA, BeppoSAX,} and {\it ROSAT} data to be
|
|
$10.0^{+0.6}_{-0.9}\,{\rm keV\,cm^{-2}\,s^{-1}\,sr^{-1}\,keV^{-1}}$ at
|
|
1\,keV. The uncertainty in the normalization between the two samples,
|
|
$\sim20\%$, is shown as the shaded yellow range (alternatively, this
|
|
represents the $\sim2\sigma$ errors in the {\it ROSAT} normalization).
|
|
|
|
In the middle panel of the figure, we calculate the predicted X-ray
|
|
background using our full model of the quasar lifetime, but with
|
|
different models for quasar obscuration. The solid black line shows
|
|
the prediction using our full model of quasar obscuration, and is
|
|
identical to the solid black line in the upper panel. The observations
|
|
are likewise shown in an identical manner to the upper panel. The
|
|
dashed black line is the prediction adopting the standard torus model
|
|
for quasar obscuration, and the dotted line adopts the receding
|
|
(luminosity-dependent) torus model. These models produce the same
|
|
overall $\sim30\,$keV normalization, as this is relatively unaffected
|
|
by obscuration, but they predict a slightly ($\sim20\%$) higher
|
|
background at low energies, giving a slightly softer spectrum. This
|
|
may appear counterintuitive, given that in Figure~\ref{fig:NH.distrib}
|
|
these models tend to overpredict the number of high-column density
|
|
sources, but this is because these models predict a strongly {\em
|
|
bimodal} column density distribution, with unobscured sightlines
|
|
encountering negligible column densities. These unobscured sightlines
|
|
dominate the soft X-ray integrated spectrum, where the large column
|
|
densities through the torus attenuate the quasar spectrum heavily.
|
|
However, this net offset in the predicted background spectrum is
|
|
generally within the range of the systematic theoretical and
|
|
observational uncertainties, and can further be alleviated by tuning
|
|
the parameters of the torus model to fit the X-ray background spectrum
|
|
(e.g.\ Treister \& Urry 2005, although their fits require a larger
|
|
fraction of Compton-thick $\nh\sim10^{25}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$ sources than
|
|
shown for even the receding torus model in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:NH.distrib}). The feature at
|
|
$\lesssim5\,$keV in the standard torus model prediction is a
|
|
consequence of assuming that ``unobscured'' lines of sight encounter
|
|
negligible column density, and does not appear if such sightlines
|
|
encounter moderate ($\sim10^{21}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$) columns.
|
|
|
|
The lower panel of the figure shows the predicted X-ray background
|
|
spectrum if we instead consider a light-bulb or exponential light
|
|
curve (fixed Eddington ratio) model for the quasar lifetime, again
|
|
with various descriptions of quasar obscuration. In such models, the
|
|
predicted X-ray background spectrum is independent of the quasar
|
|
lifetime or characteristic Eddington ratio assumed (see
|
|
Equation~\ref{eq:simple.XRB}). However, as shown in
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:integ.spectra}, these models do imply a different
|
|
integrated spectrum for quasars; i.e.\ different effective bolometric
|
|
corrections for predicting the X-ray background. In particular, in
|
|
this model, the observed quasar spectrum at a given luminosity
|
|
(averaged over the quasar population at that luminosity) is the same
|
|
as the ``effective'' quasar spectrum one would use to calculate the
|
|
{\em total} contribution to the X-ray background from quasars of the
|
|
corresponding observed or peak luminosity, whereas this is not true in
|
|
our model of quasar lifetimes. The observations are shown in the same
|
|
manner as the preceding panels. The black solid line shows the
|
|
prediction with this simplified model for the quasar lifetime, but
|
|
still adopting our full model for obscuration as a function of
|
|
instantaneous and peak luminosity, the dashed line assumes instead a
|
|
standard torus model for obscuration, and the dotted line assumes a
|
|
receding torus for the obscuration. The variations among different
|
|
obscuration models are relatively small at most energies, and similar
|
|
to those discussed above adopting our full model of quasar
|
|
lifetimes.
|
|
|
|
In all three cases, however, this model for the quasar lifetime
|
|
significantly under-predicts the X-ray background, particularly at the
|
|
$\sim30\,$keV peak. This shortfall is well-known, and earlier attempts
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Madau94,Comastri95,Gilli99,Gilli01,Pompilio00,Ueda03}
|
|
have generally had to invoke additional assumptions about large
|
|
obscured populations or a strong increase in the obscured fraction
|
|
with redshift, neither of which is consistent with observations
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Hasinger02,Barger03,Ueda03,Szokoly04,Barger05}. The
|
|
difference between the predictions of various quasar lifetime models
|
|
is, as explained above, attributable to the difference between the
|
|
integrated quasar spectrum produced in our full model of the quasar
|
|
lifetime (in which quasars spend long periods of time at low
|
|
luminosities, with harder X-ray spectra), and the integrated spectrum
|
|
in these simplified quasar lifetime models, which is proportional to
|
|
the {\em instantaneous} quasar spectrum, and therefore underpredicts
|
|
the hard X-ray portion of the spectrum by as much as $\sim50\%$.
|
|
|
|
Our prediction of the X-ray background agrees well with the observed
|
|
spectrum over the range $\sim1-100\,{\rm keV}$. (At energies above
|
|
$100\,{\rm keV}$ it is likely that processes we have not included,
|
|
such as those involving magnetic fields, contribute significantly to
|
|
the background.) Unlike previous synthesis models for the X-ray
|
|
background, we are able to do so without invoking assumptions about
|
|
large Compton thick populations or larger obscured populations at
|
|
different redshifts. In part, this is because our modeling allows us
|
|
to predict, based on $\nLp$ and our column density formulation, the
|
|
population of Compton thick sources (see
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:NH.distrib}). However, as we have demonstrated, it is
|
|
primarily because the deficit in previous synthesis models can be
|
|
attributed to their inability to properly account for the dependence
|
|
of quasar lifetimes and attenuation on both the instantaneous quasar
|
|
luminosity and the host system properties (peak luminosity). Our
|
|
picture, on the other hand, yields an estimate for the X-ray
|
|
background spectrum that is simultaneously consistent with the
|
|
observed supermassive black hole mass distribution and total density,
|
|
as well as the ``luminosity-dependent density evolution'' observed in
|
|
X-ray samples \citep{H05f}. The background is primarily built up from
|
|
$z\sim2.5$ to $z\sim0.5$, as is evident from the evolution of the black
|
|
hole mass density in Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.distrib}, although a harder
|
|
spectrum at low luminosities will weight this slightly towards lower
|
|
redshifts (where more low-luminosity quasars are forming). Compton
|
|
thick and relaxing, low-luminosity sources are accounted for, not as
|
|
large, independent populations, but as evolutionary phenomena
|
|
continuously connected to the ``normal'' quasar population.
|
|
|
|
\section{Discussion}
|
|
\label{sec:discussion}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{General Implications of our Model}
|
|
\label{sec:genimpl}
|
|
|
|
Our modeling suggests two important paradigm shifts in interpreting
|
|
quasar populations and evolution:
|
|
|
|
{\bf (1)} First, as proposed in \citet{H05c}, a proper accounting of
|
|
the luminosity dependence of quasar lifetimes (as opposed to models in
|
|
which quasars grow in a pure exponential fashion or turn on and off as
|
|
``light bulbs'') implies a novel interpretation of the luminosity
|
|
function. The steep bright end (luminosities above the ``break'' in
|
|
the luminosity function) consists of quasars radiating near their
|
|
Eddington limits and is directly related to the distribution of
|
|
intrinsic peak luminosities (or final black hole masses) as has been
|
|
assumed previously. However, the shallow, faint end of the luminosity
|
|
function describes black holes either growing in early stages of
|
|
activity or in extended, quiescent states going into or coming out of
|
|
a peak bright quasar phase, with Eddington ratios generally between $l
|
|
\sim0.01$ and 1. The ``break'' luminosity in the luminosity function
|
|
corresponds directly to the {\em peak} in the birthrate of quasars
|
|
as a function of peak luminosity $\nLP$.
|
|
|
|
This interpretation resolves inconsistencies in a number of previous
|
|
theoretical studies. For example, semi-analytical models of the quasar
|
|
luminosity functions \citep[e.g.,][]{KH00,HM00,WL03} assume, based on
|
|
simplified models for the quasar lifetime, that quasars at the faint
|
|
end of the luminosity function correspond to low final-mass black
|
|
holes (low $\Lp\sim L$), presumably in small halos. Consequently,
|
|
these models overpredict the number of active low-mass black holes (as
|
|
estimated from radio source counts), especially at high redshift, by
|
|
orders of magnitude \citep{HQB04}, and overpredict the number of
|
|
low-mass spheroids and red galaxies observed \citep{H05e}.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, both observations \citep{MD04} and comparison of the
|
|
present-day black hole mass function with radio and X-ray luminosity
|
|
functions \citep[e.g.][]{Merloni04} suggest anti-hierarchical
|
|
evolution for the growth of supermassive black holes, where the most
|
|
massive black holes were produced mainly at high ($z\gtrsim2$)
|
|
redshift, and low-mass black holes mostly formed later, which does
|
|
not follow from idealized descriptions of quasar lifetimes and the
|
|
luminosity function (for a review, see e.g.\ Combes 2005).
|
|
|
|
A one-to-one correspondence between observed luminosity and black hole
|
|
mass does produce anti-hierarchical behavior in some sense at the
|
|
high-mass end, because the most massive black holes are formed at
|
|
$z\sim2-3$ during the peak of bright quasar activity and the quasar
|
|
luminosity function evolves to lower luminosities at lower redshifts
|
|
(as is also the case for our model because the bright end of the
|
|
luminosity function is dominated by sources near their peak
|
|
luminosities). However, at black hole masses equal to or below
|
|
$\sim10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$ (i.e.\ galaxies of stellar mass
|
|
$\lesssim10^{11}\,M_{\sun}$), the evolution in the quasar luminosity
|
|
function implies a roughly constant production of black holes with
|
|
these masses at all redshifts, which is inconsistent with observations
|
|
of galaxy spheroids indicating that typical ages increase with mass,
|
|
ruling out a large population of low-mass spheroids with ages equal to
|
|
or older than those of high-mass spheroids
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Treu01,vanDokkum01,Treu02,
|
|
vDS03,Gebhardt03,Rusin03,vandeVen03,Wuyts04,Treu05,Holden05,vdW05,SA05,
|
|
Nelan05}. As demonstrated in Figure~\ref{fig:SMBH.evol}, such a model
|
|
does not produce anti-hierarchical growth or any age gradients within
|
|
the high-mass spheroid population, also inconsistent with
|
|
observations. Even given observed ``luminosity-dependent density
|
|
evolution''
|
|
\citep[e.g.][]{Page97,Miyaji00,Miyaji01,LaFranca02,Cowie03,
|
|
Ueda03,Fiore03,Hunt04,Cirasuolo05,HMS05}, implying that the densities
|
|
of lower redshift quasars peak at lower redshift, the inferred
|
|
anti-hierarchical evolution if observed luminosity directly
|
|
corresponds to black hole mass (i.e.\ as in ``light-bulb'' or ``fixed
|
|
Eddington ratio'' models) is not strong enough to account for observed
|
|
anti-hierarchical growth of the corresponding galaxy spheroids
|
|
\citep{H05e}.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, in these earlier models, a ``break'' in the luminosity
|
|
function is not necessarily reproduced \citep{WL03}, and the faint-end
|
|
slope has no direct physical motivation. The break may be caused by
|
|
feedback mechanisms which set a characteristic turnover in both the
|
|
galaxy mass function and quasar luminosity function (e.g., Scannapieco
|
|
\& Oh 2004; Dekel \& Birnboim 2004), as in our modeling. The $\nLp$
|
|
distributions in our model and ``light bulb'' or ``fixed Eddington
|
|
ratio'' models are comparable at and above the break in the quasar
|
|
luminosity function, and therefore make similar predictions for some
|
|
observations at these luminosities. However, the {\em faint-end}
|
|
slope has a different physical motivation in our model. Unlike the
|
|
bright-end slope, which is determined directly by the active final
|
|
black hole mass function or peak luminosity distribution (in
|
|
essentially all models of the quasar lifetime), the faint-end slope in
|
|
our modeling is a consequence of the quasar lifetime as a function of
|
|
luminosity, and is a prediction of our simulations and modeling almost
|
|
independent of the underlying faint-end slope of the active black hole
|
|
mass function or peak luminosity distribution. In \citet{H05f} we
|
|
examine this in more detail, and demonstrate that it predicts well the
|
|
evolution in the faint-end quasar luminosity function slope with
|
|
redshift and the observed ``luminosity-dependent density evolution''
|
|
in many samples \citep{Page97,Miyaji00,Miyaji01,LaFranca02,Cowie03,
|
|
Ueda03,Fiore03,Hunt04,Cirasuolo05,HMS05}.
|
|
|
|
Other observational evidence for our picture exists; for example in
|
|
the observed distribution of Eddington ratios (see
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:eddington}), the distribution of low-redshift, active
|
|
black hole masses (see \S~\ref{sec:BLmasses}), and the turnover in the
|
|
expected distribution of black hole masses in early-type galaxies at
|
|
$\sim10^{8}\,M_{\sun}$ \citep[e.g.,][]{Sheth03}. Total (integrated)
|
|
quasar lifetimes estimated from observations are inferred to increase
|
|
with increasing black hole mass as we predict \citep{YT02}, and
|
|
furthermore, the Eddington ratios of observed quasar samples are seen
|
|
to increase systematically with redshift, as the sample becomes
|
|
increasingly dominated by luminosities above the break in the
|
|
luminosity function \citep{MD04}.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, observations show that the evolution of the luminosity
|
|
function with decreasing redshift is driven by a decrease in the
|
|
characteristic mass scale of actively accreting black holes
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Heckman04}, which can be explained in our model by the
|
|
relation of the observed luminosity function to the {\em peak} in the
|
|
distribution of active black hole masses $\nLp$. This observation,
|
|
however, has caused considerable confusion, as observations of both
|
|
radio-quiet \citep{WooUrry02} and radio-loud \citep{ODowd02} local
|
|
(low redshift) AGN indicate that nuclear and host luminosities are
|
|
uncorrelated, implying that nuclear luminosity does not depend on
|
|
black hole mass \citep{Heckman04}, and therefore that the primary
|
|
variable determining the nuclear luminosity is the Eddington ratio,
|
|
with the luminosity function spanning a broad range in Eddington
|
|
ratios \citep{Hao05}. Furthermore, observations show that this is
|
|
{\em not} true of high redshift quasars, as both direct estimates of
|
|
accretion rates \citep[e.g.,][]{Vestergaard04,MD04} and the fact that
|
|
their high luminosities would yield unreasonably large black hole
|
|
masses rule out substantially sub-Eddington accretion rates for most
|
|
objects. Many previous empirical and semi-analytical models could not
|
|
simultaneously account for these observations. To explain just the
|
|
low-redshift observations, such models adopt tunable distributions of
|
|
Eddington ratios fitted to the data. However, both these observations
|
|
are consequences of our interpretation of the luminosity function, as
|
|
observations of local AGN and the low-redshift luminosity function are
|
|
dominated by quasars below the break in the luminosity function, which
|
|
are undergoing sub-Eddington growth and span a wide range of Eddington
|
|
ratios, while observations at high redshift are dominated by bright
|
|
objects at or above the break in the luminosity function, which are
|
|
undergoing Eddington-limited (or near Eddington-limited) growth near
|
|
their peak luminosity (see \S~\ref{sec:eddington}).
|
|
|
|
{\bf (2)} The second paradigm shift indicated by our modeling is that
|
|
quasar obscuration is not a static or quasi-static geometric effect,
|
|
but is primarily an {\em evolutionary} effect. The physical reasoning
|
|
for this is simple: the massive gas inflows required to fuel quasar
|
|
activity produce large obscuring columns, and so column densities are
|
|
correlated with quasar luminosity. The basic picture of buried quasar
|
|
activity associated with the early growth of supermassive black holes
|
|
and starburst activity has been proposed previously and studied for
|
|
some time \citep[e.g.,][]{SM96,Fabian99}, but our modeling allows us
|
|
to describe the evolution of obscuration in a self-consistent manner,
|
|
defining obscured and unobscured phases appropriately and identifying
|
|
dynamical correlations between the column density distribution and
|
|
instantaneous and peak luminosities.
|
|
|
|
There is substantial observational support for this picture. Point-like X-ray
|
|
sources have been observed in many bright sub-millimeter or infrared
|
|
and starburst sources, with essentially all very luminous infrared
|
|
galaxies showing evidence of buried quasar activity
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{SM96,Komossa03,Ptak03}, indicating simultaneous buried
|
|
black hole growth and star formation at redshifts corresponding to
|
|
peak quasar activity ($z\gtrsim1$) \citep{Alexander05a,Alexander05b}.
|
|
The buried black holes in high-z starbursting galaxies appear to be
|
|
active but undermassive compared to the quiescent galaxy black
|
|
hole-stellar mass relation \citep{Borys05}, implying that they are
|
|
rapidly growing in the starburst but have not yet reached their final
|
|
masses, presumably set in the subsequent ``blowout'' phase.
|
|
Similarly, observations suggest that obscured AGN are significantly
|
|
more likely to exhibit strong sub-millimeter emission characteristic
|
|
of star formation, implying both that obscured black hole growth and
|
|
star formation are correlated and that obscuration mechanisms
|
|
(responsible for re-radiation in the submm and IR) may be primarily
|
|
isotropic in at least some cases \citep[e.g.,][]{Page04,Stevens05}.
|
|
Evidence from quasar emission line structure
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Kuraszkiewicz00,Tran03}, directly related to the inner
|
|
broad-line region, suggests that isotropic obscuration of quasars can
|
|
be important, in contradiction to angle-dependent models. Finally,
|
|
many observations
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Steffen03,Ueda03,Hasinger04,GRW04,sazrev04,Barger05,Simpson05}
|
|
indicate that the fraction of broad-line or obscured quasars is a
|
|
function of luminosity, which cannot be accounted for in traditional
|
|
static ``torus'' models \citep[e.g.,][]{Antonucci93} or reproduced
|
|
even by modified luminosity-dependent torus models \citep{Lawrence91},
|
|
an observation that is explained by our model (see
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:BLqso} for a detailed discussion).
|
|
|
|
Much of the obscuration in our modeling comes from large scales,
|
|
arising from the inner regions of the host galaxy on scales
|
|
$\sim50\,$pc or larger. While our resolution limits prevent our
|
|
ruling out the possibility of gas collapse to a dense, $\sim\,$pc
|
|
scale torus surrounding the black hole, during the peak obscured
|
|
phases of the final merger, our simulations indicate that these large
|
|
scales dominate the contribution to the column density, with quite
|
|
large columns, which should be observationally testable. Indeed, this
|
|
is suggested by the typical scales of obscuration in starbursting
|
|
systems (e.g.\ Soifer et al.\ 1984a,b; Sanders et al.\ 1986, 1988a,b;
|
|
for a review, see e.g.\ Soifer et al.\ 1987), given that, as discussed
|
|
above, the dominant obscured phase of growth is closely associated
|
|
with a starburst as implied observationally
|
|
\citep{Alexander05a,Alexander05b,Borys05}.
|
|
|
|
Observations of polarized light in intrinsically bright Type II AGN
|
|
with unobscured luminosities typical of quasars (as opposed to local,
|
|
dim Seyfert II objects in relaxed hosts) show scattering on large
|
|
scales $\sim$kpc, and in some cases obscuration clearly generated over
|
|
scales extending beyond the host galaxy in the form of distortions,
|
|
tidal tails, and streams from interactions and major mergers
|
|
\citep{Zakamska04,Zakamska05}. The angular structure seen in these
|
|
observations is consistent with our modeling. Moreover, in optically
|
|
faint X-ray quasars \citep[e.g.][]{Donley05} it appears that
|
|
obscuration is generated by the host galaxies, and is directly related
|
|
to host galaxy morphologies and line-of-sight distance through the
|
|
host. The critical point is that, regardless of the angular structure
|
|
of obscuration, typical column densities are strongly evolving
|
|
functions of time, luminosity, and host system properties, and the
|
|
observed distribution of column densities is dominated by these
|
|
effects, not by differences in viewing angle across a uniform
|
|
population. This is the case in our modeling as the lognormal
|
|
dispersion (across different lines of sight) in column densities is
|
|
$\sigNH\sim0.4$ for a given simulation at some instant, whereas
|
|
typical column densities across simulations, as a function of
|
|
instantaneous and peak luminosities, span several orders of magnitude
|
|
from $\nh\sim10^{18}-10^{26}\ {\rm cm^{-2}}$.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Specific Predictions of our Model}
|
|
\label{sec:specpred}
|
|
|
|
Our predictions include:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item Quasar Lifetimes: We find that for a particular source, the
|
|
quasar lifetime depends sensitively on luminosity, with the observed
|
|
lifetime in addition depending on the observed waveband. Intrinsic
|
|
quasar lifetimes vary from $t_{Q}\sim10^{6}-10^{8}$\,yrs, with
|
|
observable lifetimes $\sim10^{7}$\,yrs in optical B-band
|
|
\citep{H05a,H05b}, in good agreement with observational estimates
|
|
\citep[for a review, see][]{Martini04}.
|
|
|
|
\item Luminosity Functions: Using a parameterization of the intrinsic
|
|
distribution of peak luminosities (final quasar black hole masses) at
|
|
a given redshift, our model of quasar lifetimes allows us to reproduce
|
|
the observed luminosity function at all luminosities and redshifts
|
|
$z=0-6$. Although this is an empirical determination of the peak
|
|
luminosity distribution, it implies a new interpretation of the
|
|
luminosity function \citep{H05c}, which provides a physical basis for
|
|
the observed ``break'' corresponding to the peak in the peak
|
|
luminosity distribution. Moreover, the faint end slope is not
|
|
determined by our empirical fitting procedure, but instead by the
|
|
dependence of the quasar lifetime on luminosity, with its value and
|
|
redshift evolution predicted by our modeling \citep{H05f}. The
|
|
evolution of typical column densities in different stages of merger
|
|
activity produces a significant population of obscured quasars,
|
|
accounting for the difference between hard X-ray \citep[e.g.,][]{Ueda03},
|
|
soft X-ray \citep[e.g.,][]{Miyaji01}, and optical B-band
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Croom04} luminosity functions (\S~\ref{sec:fullLF}).
|
|
|
|
\item Column Density Distributions: The evolution of the column
|
|
densities in our simulations reproduces the observed distribution of
|
|
columns in optically-selected quasar samples, when the appropriate
|
|
selection criteria are applied \citep{H05b}, as well as complete
|
|
column distributions in hard X-ray selected samples
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:NHdistrib}). Column density evolution over the course of
|
|
a merger yields a wider observed distribution of columns than that
|
|
produced across different viewing angles at a given point in a
|
|
merger.
|
|
|
|
\item Broad Line Luminosity Function and Fraction: Using our
|
|
simulations to estimate when quasars will be observable as broad-line
|
|
objects (either based on the ratio of quasar to host galaxy optical
|
|
B-band luminosity or the obscuring column density), we reproduce the
|
|
luminosity function of broad-line quasars in hard X-ray selected
|
|
samples as well as optical broad-line quasar surveys, and the fraction
|
|
of broad-line quasars in a given sample as a function of luminosity,
|
|
to better precision than traditional or luminosity-dependent (but
|
|
non-dynamical) torus models which are fitted to the data
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:BLfraction}). By providing an a priori prediction of the
|
|
broad-line fraction as a function of luminosity and redshift which
|
|
depends systematically on the typical quasar host galaxy gas fraction,
|
|
we propose that observations of the broad line fraction at different
|
|
redshifts can be used to constrain the gas fraction of quasar hosts
|
|
and its evolution with redshift.
|
|
|
|
\item Active Black Hole Mass Functions: Using our prescription for
|
|
deciding when objects will be visible as ``broad-line'' quasars, we
|
|
predict the distribution of low-redshift, broad-line and non-broad
|
|
line active quasar masses, in good agreement with observations from
|
|
the SDSS, with expected incompleteness in the observed sample at low
|
|
$M_{\rm BH}\lesssim10^{6}\,M_{\sun}$ black hole masses
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:BLmasses}). This is a new prediction which can be tested
|
|
in greater detail by future observations, and our calculations allow
|
|
us to model the differences in active black hole mass functions of the
|
|
Type I and Type II populations. The width of the expected broad-line
|
|
black hole mass function depends significantly on the model of quasar
|
|
lifetimes, enabling such measurements to probe the statistics of
|
|
quasar evolution.
|
|
|
|
\item Eddington Ratios: We determine Eddington ratio distributions
|
|
from our simulations, given the peak luminosity distribution implied
|
|
by the observed quasar luminosity function. The predicted
|
|
distribution, once the appropriate observed magnitude limit is
|
|
imposed, agrees well with observations at both low ($z<0.5$) and high
|
|
($1.5<z<3.5$) redshifts (\S~\ref{sec:eddington}). As noted above, our
|
|
interpretation of the luminosity function explains seemingly
|
|
contradictory observations of Eddington ratios at different redshifts.
|
|
There is even a suggestion \citep{CX05} that the evolution of quasars
|
|
seen in our simulations (with bright phases in mergers and extended
|
|
relaxation after) can account for observations of bimodal Eddington
|
|
ratio distributions at $z\sim0$ \citep{Marchesini04}, when coupled
|
|
with an appropriate description of radiatively inefficient accretion
|
|
phases, although it is possible that many of these low-redshift black
|
|
holes are not fueled by mergers, especially in e.g.\ low-luminosity
|
|
Seyferts.
|
|
|
|
\item Relic Black Hole Mass Function: With our model for quasar
|
|
lifetimes, the luminosity function at a given redshift implies a
|
|
birthrate of sources with given peak luminosities, $\nLp$, which
|
|
translates to a distribution in final black hole masses. Integrating
|
|
this over redshift, we predict the present-day mass distribution and
|
|
total mass density of supermassive black holes. They agree well with
|
|
observational estimates inferred from local populations of galaxy
|
|
spheroids. In our picture, these spheroids are produced
|
|
simultaneously with the supermassive black holes they harbor
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:smbh}). We demonstrate that the integrated supermassive
|
|
black hole density, quasar flux density, and number counts in
|
|
different wavebands can be reconciled with a radiative efficiency
|
|
$\epsilon_{r}=0.1$, satisfying the constraints of counting arguments
|
|
such as that of \citet{Soltan82}. Further, we show in
|
|
\S~\ref{sec:detailsCompare} and \S~\ref{sec:whenBL} that the
|
|
corrections to such observational arguments based on optical quasar
|
|
samples are small (order unity) when we account for the luminosity
|
|
dependence of quasar lifetimes, despite an extended obscured phase of
|
|
quasar growth. In other words, although a quasar spends more time
|
|
obscured than it does as a bright optical source, the total mass
|
|
growth and radiated energy are dominated by the final ``blowout''
|
|
stage visible as a bright optical quasar.
|
|
|
|
\item X-ray Background: The integrated quasar spectrum from our models
|
|
of quasar lifetimes and column densities as a function of
|
|
instantaneous and peak luminosities can be combined with the birthrate
|
|
of quasars with a given peak luminosity to give the integrated cosmic
|
|
background in any frequency range. We predict both the normalization
|
|
and shape of the X-ray background from $\sim1-100$\,keV, with our
|
|
modeling accounting for quasar obscuration as an evolutionary process
|
|
(with a corresponding population of Compton-thick objects), avoiding
|
|
any need for arbitrary assumptions about additional obscured
|
|
populations (\S~\ref{sec:xrb.tot}). For any model in which the quasar
|
|
spectrum depends on luminosity or accretion rate, we demonstrate that
|
|
a proper modeling of the quasar lifetime is critical to reproducing
|
|
observed backgrounds.
|
|
|
|
\item Correlation Functions: In \citet{Lidz05}, we predict the quasar
|
|
correlation function and bias as a function of redshift and luminosity
|
|
using our model, and compare it to that expected using ``light bulb''
|
|
or exponential light curves. As most quasars in our modeling have a
|
|
characteristic peak luminosity or final black hole mass corresponding
|
|
to the peak of the $\nLp$ distribution, they reside in hosts of
|
|
similar mass, and there is little change in bias with luminosity at a
|
|
given redshift, in contrast to idealized models for the quasar
|
|
lifetime and luminosity function. Our predicted bias agrees well with
|
|
the observations of \citet{Croom05}, who also find no evidence for a
|
|
dependence of the correlation on quasar luminosity at a given
|
|
redshift, as we expect. In fact, \citet{PMN04} and \citet{Croom05}
|
|
find that their observations can be explained if quasars lie in hosts
|
|
with a constant characteristic mass $\sim 2\times10^{12}\,M_{\sun}$
|
|
($h=0.7$). If we consider their redshift range $z\sim1-2$, we predict
|
|
the quasar population will be dominated by sources with
|
|
$\Lp=\lstar(z)$, which given $\mbhf(\Lp)$ and using the $M_{\rm
|
|
BH}-M_{\rm halo}$ relation of \citet{WL03} yields a nearly constant
|
|
characteristic host halo mass $\sim1-2\times10^{12}\,M_{\sun}$, in
|
|
good agreement. Similarly, \citet{Adelberger05} find that the
|
|
quasar-galaxy cross-correlation function does not vary with
|
|
luminosity, implying with $\sim90\%$ confidence that faint and bright
|
|
quasars reside in halos with similar masses and that fainter AGN are
|
|
longer lived, strongly disfavoring traditional ``light bulb'' and
|
|
exponential light curve models. Furthermore, \citet{Hennawi05} find
|
|
an order of magnitude excess in quasar clustering at small scales
|
|
$\lesssim 40\,h^{-1}\,{\rm kpc}$, with the correlation function
|
|
becoming progressively steeper at sub-Mpc scales, suggesting that
|
|
quasar activity is triggered by interactions and mergers.
|
|
|
|
\item Host Galaxy Properties: Because black
|
|
hole growth and spheroid formation occur together in our
|
|
picture, our modeling allows us to describe
|
|
relationships between black hole and galaxy properties. For example, we
|
|
reproduce both the observed $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$ relation
|
|
\citep{DSH05,Robertson05b} and the fundamental plane of elliptical
|
|
galaxies (Robertson et al., in preparation). Since we also reproduce
|
|
the distribution of relic black holes inferred from the $z=0$
|
|
distribution of spheroid velocity dispersions or luminosity functions
|
|
using the observed versions of these relations, our match to these
|
|
relations indicates that we also reproduce these distributions of host
|
|
spheroid properties. We consider this in detail in \citet{H05e}, and
|
|
find that we are able to account for a wide range of host galaxy
|
|
properties, including luminosity and mass functions, color-magnitude
|
|
relations, mass-to-light ratios, and ages as a function of size, mass,
|
|
and redshift. With our modeling of the quasar lifetime as motivated
|
|
by our simulations, the evolution and distribution of properties of
|
|
red-sequence galaxies and the quasar population are shown to be
|
|
self-consistent, which is not the case for idealized models of quasar
|
|
evolution.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
Aside from an empirical estimate of the distribution of peak quasar
|
|
luminosities $\nLp$, we determine all of the quantities summarized
|
|
above self-consistently from the input physics of our simulations,
|
|
including a physically motivated dynamic accretion and feedback model
|
|
in which black holes accrete at the Bondi rate determined from the
|
|
surrounding gas, and $\sim5\%$ of the radiant energy couples thermally
|
|
to that gas. Beyond this, our simulations enable us to calculate the
|
|
various predictions above {\em a priori}, without the need for
|
|
additional assumptions or tunable parameters.
|
|
|
|
We compare each of these predictions to those obtained using idealized
|
|
descriptions of the quasar lifetime, i.e.\ ``light-bulb'' and
|
|
exponential light curve (constant Eddington ratio) models, and the
|
|
column density distribution, i.e.\ standard and ``receding''
|
|
(luminosity-dependent) torus models. We fit all these (along with our
|
|
full model) to the observed luminosity function in the same manner
|
|
(allowing the same degree of freedom to ensure that they all yield the
|
|
same observed luminosity function), and we fit the free parameters of
|
|
these tunable models (e.g.\ typical Eddington ratios and quasar
|
|
lifetimes for the ``light-bulb'' or exponential models, typical column
|
|
densities and torus scalings for the torus models) {\em independently}
|
|
to each observation to maximize their ability to reproduce
|
|
observations. However, we still find better agreement between our
|
|
model (with no parameters tuned to match observations) and the
|
|
observations in nearly every case where the tunable phenomenological
|
|
model is not guaranteed to reproduce the observation by construction.
|
|
The one exception is the relic supermassive black hole mass
|
|
function, for which the predictions of our modeling and idealized
|
|
lifetime models are essentially identical, reflecting the fact that in
|
|
both cases black hole growth is dominated by bright, optically
|
|
observable, high Eddington ratio phases.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, the best-fit parameters for the idealized models, when
|
|
fitted independently to each observation, are not self-consistent.
|
|
For example, calculations of the black hole mass function imply high
|
|
Eddington ratios $l\sim0.5-1$ \citep[e.g.,][]{YT02}, and our fit to
|
|
the active black hole mass function \citep{Heckman04} suggests
|
|
$l\sim1$, but the observed distribution of accretion shows a typical
|
|
$l\sim0.3$ \citep{Vestergaard04}, and fitting to the broad-line
|
|
fraction as a function of luminosity with our full obscuration model
|
|
but these lifetime models implies a lower $l\sim0.05$. Likewise,
|
|
fitting torus models to the X-ray background suggests typical column
|
|
densities through the torus of $\nh\sim10^{25}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{TU05}, while fitting to the observed column density
|
|
distributions \citep{Treister04,Mainieri05} suggests equatorial
|
|
columns $\nh\lesssim10^{24}\,{\rm cm^{-2}}$. Clearly then,
|
|
reproducing the observations listed above, and in particular doing so
|
|
self-consistently, is not implicit in any model which successfully
|
|
reproduces the quasar luminosity function, even at multiple
|
|
frequencies.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Further Testable Predictions of our Model}
|
|
\label{sec:testpred}
|
|
|
|
Our model for quasar evolution makes a number of observationally
|
|
testable predictions:
|
|
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\item Quasar lifetimes are only weakly constrained by observations
|
|
\citep[e.g.][]{Martini04}, but future studies may be able to measure
|
|
both the lifetime of individual quasars and the statistical lifetimes
|
|
of quasar populations as a function of luminosity. We describe in
|
|
detail our predictions for the evolution of individual quasars and
|
|
quantify their lifetimes in \S~\ref{sec:methods}, and further predict
|
|
the distribution of both integrated and differential lifetimes in an
|
|
observed sample as a function of luminosity. This should provide a
|
|
basis for comparison with a wide range of observations, with the most
|
|
important prediction being that the quasar lifetime should increase
|
|
with decreasing luminosity.
|
|
|
|
\item For a reasonably complete, optically selected sample above some
|
|
luminosity, the distribution of observed column densities should
|
|
broaden to both larger and smaller \NH\ values as the minimum observed
|
|
luminosity is decreased, as both intrinsically faint periods with low
|
|
column density and intrinsically bright periods with high column
|
|
density become observable.
|
|
|
|
\item Similarly, the Eddington ratio distribution should be a function
|
|
of observed luminosity, with a broad distribution of Eddington ratios
|
|
down to $l\sim0.01-0.1$ at luminosities well below the break in the
|
|
observed luminosity function, and a more strongly peaked distribution
|
|
about $l\sim0.2-1$ for luminosities above the break
|
|
(Figure~\ref{fig:Pofl.all}).
|
|
|
|
\item In our interpretation, the bright and faint ends of the
|
|
luminosity function correspond statistically to similar mixes of
|
|
galaxies, but in various stages of evolution; whereas in all other
|
|
competing scenarios, the quasar luminosity is directly related to the
|
|
mass of the host galaxy. Therefore, any observational probe that
|
|
differentiates quasars based on their host galaxy properties such as,
|
|
for example, the dependence of the clustering of quasars on
|
|
luminosity, or the host stellar mass and size as a function of
|
|
luminosity (although we caution that this is somewhat dependent of the
|
|
modeling of star formation in mergers), can be used to discriminate
|
|
our picture from older models. We present a detailed prediction of the
|
|
quasar correlation function based on our modeling for comparison with
|
|
observations in \citet{Lidz05}.
|
|
|
|
\item Our distribution $\nLp$ directly translates to a black hole
|
|
merger rate, as a function of mass, in our modeling, allowing a
|
|
detailed prediction of the gravitational wave signal from black hole
|
|
mergers as a function of redshift.
|
|
|
|
\item The broad line fraction as a function of luminosity, defined by
|
|
requiring that ``broad-line'' objects have an observed B-band
|
|
luminosity above a fraction $f_{\rm BL}$ of that of their host galaxy,
|
|
is a prediction of our model quasar and galaxy light curves. However,
|
|
the uncertainties are large, primarily because different observational
|
|
samples have varying sensitivity to quasar vs.\ host galaxy optical
|
|
light. Furthermore, the host galaxy gas fraction and $f_{\rm BL}$ are
|
|
degenerate in these predictions -- a well-defined observational sample
|
|
complete to some $f_{\rm BL}$ can constrain our modeling of quasar
|
|
fueling and the relation between quasar and host galaxy light
|
|
curves. In particular, such observations, either by measuring the
|
|
faint-end shape of the ``broad-line'' quasar luminosity function or
|
|
the mean ``broad-line'' fraction at a given luminosity as a function
|
|
of redshift, can constrain the gas fractions of quasar host galaxies
|
|
and their evolution, essentially a free parameter in our empirical
|
|
modeling.
|
|
|
|
\item We also predict the distribution of active, low-redshift black
|
|
hole masses in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}. These predictions can be compared
|
|
to mass functions for active black holes from numerous quasar surveys,
|
|
which should include improved mass functions of the entire quasar
|
|
population complete to lower luminosities as well as future mass
|
|
functions for the population of active broad-line AGN. We provide
|
|
predictions for the black hole mass function of all active quasars,
|
|
and for just the ``broad-line'' population (as a function of the
|
|
survey selection).
|
|
|
|
\item Because the evolution of spheroids and supermassive black holes
|
|
is linked in our modeling, with each affecting the evolution of the
|
|
other, we can also use the distribution of observed quasar properties
|
|
to predict galaxy properties such as number counts, spheroid masses
|
|
and luminosities, and colors as a function of redshift. For the
|
|
calculation and discussion of these predictions, see \citet{H05e}.
|
|
|
|
\item In our model, the growth of supermassive black holes is
|
|
dominated by galaxy mergers. Therefore, at any given redshift, the
|
|
mass (and as a consequence, luminosity) function of galaxy mergers
|
|
should have a similar shape to our distribution of quasar birthrates,
|
|
$\nLp$, distinct from the shapes of either the quasar or total galaxy
|
|
luminosity functions. Indeed, preliminary observational estimates of
|
|
both the merger luminosity function
|
|
\citep[e.g.,][]{Xu04,Conselice03,Wolf05} and quasar host galaxy
|
|
luminosity function \citep{bkss97,Hamilton02}, primarily at low
|
|
redshifts, appear be consistent with this expectation. Theoretically,
|
|
it may be possible to predict the merger luminosity function using
|
|
either cosmological simulations or semi-analytical models; we discuss
|
|
this further in \S~\ref{sec:finis}.
|
|
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Mock Quasar Catalogs}
|
|
\label{sec:mockcat}
|
|
|
|
In principle, our modeling can be used to predict the distributions of
|
|
quasar luminosities in various wavebands, column densities, active
|
|
black hole masses, and peak luminosities for a wide range of
|
|
observational samples, but it is impractical for us to plot
|
|
predictions of these quantities for all possible sample selection
|
|
criteria. To enable comparison with a wider range of observations, we
|
|
have used our modeling and the conditional probability distributions
|
|
for these quantities from our simulations to generate Monte Carlo
|
|
realizations of quasar populations, which we provide publicly via ftp\footnote{
|
|
\url{ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/phopkins/qso\_catalogs/}}.
|
|
|
|
At a particular redshift, we use our fitted $\nLp$ distribution and
|
|
our suite of simulations to generate a random population of mock
|
|
``quasars.'' We first generate the peak luminosities of each
|
|
``quasar'' according to the fitted $\nLp$ at that redshift. For each
|
|
object, we then use the probability of being at a given instantaneous
|
|
luminosity in simulations with a similar peak luminosity to generate a
|
|
current bolometric luminosity. In practice, we calculate the
|
|
$P(L\,|\Lp)$ distribution by summing $w(\Lp ,\ L_{\rm peak,\ i})\times
|
|
P(L\,| L_{\rm peak,\ i})$, where $\Lp$ is the mock quasar peak
|
|
luminosity, $L_{\rm peak,\ i}$ is the peak luminosity of each
|
|
simulation and $w(\Lp ,\ L_{\rm peak,\ i})$ is a Gaussian weighting
|
|
factor ($\propto\exp(-\log^{2}(\Lp/L_{\rm peak,\ i})/2 (0.05)^{2})$).
|
|
Knowing the instantaneous bolometric luminosity $L$ and peak
|
|
luminosity $\Lp$, we then follow an identical procedure to determine
|
|
the joint distribution $P(X\,|\,L,\,\Lp)$ of each subsequent quantity
|
|
$X$, from simulations with similar $L$ and $\Lp$. We have compared
|
|
this with Monte Carlo realizations based on our fitted probability
|
|
distributions in this paper, and find that essentially identical
|
|
results are achieved for e.g.\ the distribution of $L$ and $\Lp$, and
|
|
column densities in phases of growth not near peak luminosity.
|
|
However, this modeling is not identical for e.g.\ the distribution of
|
|
Eddington ratios and column densities around $L\sim\Lp$, which
|
|
reflects the fact that our fits to the Eddington ratio distribution
|
|
(\S~\ref{sec:eddington}) are rough and that our fits to the column
|
|
density distribution do not apply to the final ``blowout'' phase of
|
|
quasar evolution (as discussed in detail in \S~\ref{sec:BLqso}).
|
|
|
|
For each mock quasar, we generate a peak luminosity, final
|
|
(post-merger) black hole mass, instantaneous bolometric luminosity,
|
|
intrinsic (un-attenuated) B-band ($\nu L_{\nu}$ at $\nu=4400$\AA),
|
|
soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV), and hard X-ray (2-10 keV) luminosity, observed
|
|
(attenuated using the generated column density and the reddening/dust
|
|
extinction modeling described in \S~\ref{sec:NH}, with SMC-like
|
|
reddening curves and extinction following e.g.\ Pei 1992, Morrison \&
|
|
McCammon 1983) B-band, soft X-ray, and hard X-ray luminosities, column
|
|
density of neutral hydrogen, column density of neutral+ionized
|
|
hydrogen, and instantaneous black hole mass. The intrinsic
|
|
luminosities in each band are calculated using the bolometric
|
|
corrections described in \citet{Marconi04}, which account for the
|
|
luminosity dependence of the optical-to-X-ray luminosity ratio
|
|
$\alpha_{\rm OX}$ (as discussed in \S~\ref{sec:fullLF}), and then
|
|
attenuated to give the observed luminosities. We also provide
|
|
intrinsic and attenuated luminosities in each waveband using the
|
|
constant bolometric corrections of \citet{Elvis94}, but we caution
|
|
that these are not calculated in a completely self-consistent manner,
|
|
as our assumed bolometric luminosity function to which we fit the
|
|
$\nLp$ distribution is based on using the luminosity-dependent
|
|
bolometric corrections. We do not directly calculate Eddington ratios,
|
|
as these are defined differently in many observed samples, but they
|
|
should be calculable with the given luminosities and black hole
|
|
masses.
|
|
|
|
We calculate these quantities for a mock sample of $\sim10^{9}$
|
|
quasars at each redshift $z=0.2,\ 0.5,\ 1,\ 2,\ {\rm and}\ 3$. Most of
|
|
these quasars are at luminosities orders of magnitude below those
|
|
observed, therefore for space considerations and because our
|
|
predictions become uncertain at low luminosities, we retain only the
|
|
$10^{6}$ quasars with brightest bolometric luminosities at each
|
|
redshift. This introduces some uncertainty in our statistics at the
|
|
lowest luminosities in any given band, but these luminosities are
|
|
generally still well below those observed in most samples. At any
|
|
luminosity, but especially at the brightest luminosities, there is
|
|
also a significant amount of effective ``noise'' owing to our
|
|
incomplete sampling of the enormous parameter space of possible
|
|
mergers, and decreasing total time across simulations spent at large
|
|
luminosities, which can be estimated from e.g.\
|
|
Figures~\ref{fig:LF.hists} and \ref{fig:Ueda.BL}. Finally, at each
|
|
redshift, we generate two distributions, reflecting the $\sim1\sigma$
|
|
range in $\nLp$, and roughly parameterizing the degeneracies in our
|
|
fit to the observed luminosity functions and uncertainty in the
|
|
faint-end of $\nLp$ -- ``Fit 1'' has a lower $\lstar$ (lower peak in
|
|
$\nLp$), with a larger $\sstar$ (broader $\nLp$ distribution), and
|
|
``Fit 2'' has a higher $\lstar$ and smaller $\sstar$ (more narrowly
|
|
peaked $\nLp$ distribution). We show a few example ``quasars'' from
|
|
our $z=0.2$ mock distribution in Table~\ref{tbl:montecarlo}, to
|
|
demonstrate the format and units used.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Starburst Galaxies}
|
|
\label{sec:relburst}
|
|
|
|
Although we do not yet model the re-radiation of absorbed light by
|
|
dust or the contribution of stellar light to quasar host IR
|
|
luminosities, including these in our picture for quasar evolution will
|
|
enable us to predict luminosity functions in the IR and sub-mm and
|
|
their evolution with redshift. We can at this point, however,
|
|
estimate if our model for quasar lifetimes and merger-driven evolution
|
|
with $\nLp$ is consistent with the observed distribution of
|
|
ultraluminous infrared galaxies. Naively, we might expect that since
|
|
the obscured quasar phase has a duration up to $\sim10$ times that of
|
|
the optically observable quasar phase, there should be $\sim10$ times
|
|
as many ULIRGs as bright optical QSOs. But, this neglects the
|
|
complicated, luminosity dependent nature of quasar lifetimes.
|
|
|
|
Given that the bright quasars we simulate attain, during their peak
|
|
growth phase, an intrinsic luminosity comparable to that of the host
|
|
starburst, and that this period of peak growth has a similar duration
|
|
to the starburst phase \citep[see Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}
|
|
and][]{DSH05,SDH05b}, we can estimate (roughly) the ULIRG bolometric
|
|
luminosity function from our bolometric quasar luminosity function.
|
|
Thus, the more accurate comparison to the ULIRG luminosity function is
|
|
with the hard X-ray quasar luminosity function, as this recovers (and
|
|
at some luminosities can be dominated by) ``buried'' quasars in
|
|
starburst phases. This is only applicable {\em above} the break in
|
|
the luminosity function, where quasars are undergoing peak quasar
|
|
growth. Below the break, quasars are, on average, sub-Eddington and
|
|
can have luminosities well below that of their star-forming hosts (see
|
|
Figure~\ref{fig:BL.in.sims}), so we expect our quasar luminosity
|
|
function to be significantly shallower than the ULIRG luminosity
|
|
function at these luminosities. Note also that this does not imply
|
|
that ULIRGs are all AGN-dominated, as the starburst and peak AGN
|
|
activity can be (and generally are) somewhat offset, but only says
|
|
that the lifetime curves at the bright end should be similar.
|
|
|
|
Considering the luminosity function at $z=0.15$, then, we expect ULIRG
|
|
densities $d\Phi/{\rm d} M_{\rm bol}\sim 3\times10^{-7}\ {\rm and}\
|
|
9\times10^{-8}\ {\rm Mpc^{-3}\,mag^{-1}}$ at $L\sim1.6\times\Lcut{12}$
|
|
and $2.5\times\Lcut{12}$, respectively. These estimates are
|
|
consistent with the observed density in the {\it IRAS} 1 Jy Survey
|
|
\citep{Kim98} at a mean redshift $z=0.15$, with ${\rm d}\Phi/{\rm d}
|
|
M_{\rm bol}\sim 5\times10^{-7},\ 7\times10^{-8}\ {\rm
|
|
Mpc^{-3}\,mag^{-1}}$ (rescaled to our cosmology), and as expected, our
|
|
quasar luminosity function slope becomes significantly shallower than
|
|
the observed 1 Jy survey luminosity function slope below $L\sim
|
|
10^{11}-10^{12}\,L_{\sun}$, roughly the break luminosity of the
|
|
luminosity function. We predict these densities to change with
|
|
redshift according to the evolution of $\nLp$, decreasing by a factor
|
|
$\sim1.5$ at $z=0.04$, in good agreement with the evolution of IRAS
|
|
ULIRG luminosity functions \citep{Kim98}. Likewise, at $z\sim1-3$, we
|
|
predict a mean space density $\Phi(L>\Lcut{11})\sim1-3\times10^{5}\
|
|
{\rm Mpc^{-3}}$, in agreement with the $\sim5\times10^{5}\ {\rm
|
|
Mpc^{-3}}$ density of such sources expected to reproduce the observed
|
|
cumulative source density $4\times10^{4}\,{\rm deg^{-2}}$ of 1\,mJy
|
|
$850\,\mu{\rm m}$ SCUBA sources \citep{Barger99}. Furthermore, our
|
|
prediction of the fraction of buried AGN and its evolution with
|
|
redshift agrees well with determinations from X-ray samples
|
|
\citep{Barger05} and recent Spitzer results in the mid and
|
|
near-infrared at $z\sim2$ \citep{Martinez05}.
|
|
|
|
\subsection{AGN not Triggered by Mergers}
|
|
\label{sec:nonmerger}
|
|
|
|
Some low redshift quasars (e.g.\ Bahcall et al.\ 1996) and many
|
|
nearby, low-luminosity Seyferts appear to reside in ordinary,
|
|
relatively undisturbed galaxies. Our picture for quasar evolution
|
|
does not immediately account for these objects because we suppose that
|
|
nuclear activity is mainly triggered by tidal torques during a merger.
|
|
|
|
This work is primarily concerned with the origin of the
|
|
majority of the mass in spheroids and supermassive black holes, and as
|
|
a consequence, the relation of this to the abundance and
|
|
evolution of quasars and the cosmic X-ray background. Based on our
|
|
present analysis, we believe that a merger-driven picture can account
|
|
for the main part of each of these, and, as described earlier, that the
|
|
most relevant phase in the history of the Universe to these phenomena
|
|
appears to have been at moderate redshifts, $z\sim2.5$ to $z\sim0.5$.
|
|
|
|
Our model does not exclude other mechanisms for triggering AGN and it
|
|
is likely that a variety of stochastic or continuous processes are
|
|
relevant to nuclear activity in undisturbed disks and residual
|
|
low-level accretion in relaxed systems. This is not contrary to our
|
|
picture because most of the total black hole mass density in the
|
|
Universe is in spheroid-dominated systems. The principal requirement
|
|
of our model is that AGN activity in undisturbed galaxies should not
|
|
contribute a large fraction of the black hole mass density in the
|
|
Universe, to avoid spoiling tight correlations between the black hole
|
|
and host galaxy properties and producing too large a present-day black
|
|
hole mass density in violation of the Soltan (1982) constraint.
|
|
|
|
For example, if a molecular cloud passed through the center of our Galaxy near Sgr
|
|
A$^{\ast}$, it is possible that the Milky Way would resemble a Seyfert
|
|
for some period of time. Alternatively, it has long been recognized
|
|
that mass loss from normal stellar evolution of bulge stars or stellar
|
|
clusters near the centers of galaxies can provide a continuous supply
|
|
of fuel for low-level accretion \citep[e.g.,][]{MLC81,MB81,Shull83}.
|
|
Typical galactic stellar mass loss rates
|
|
($\dot{M}\sim1\,M_{\sun}\,{\rm yr^{-1}}\,(10^{11}\,M_{\sun})^{-1}$)
|
|
yield Bondi-Hoyle accretion rates $\sim10^{-5}-10^{-4}$ of Eddington
|
|
in relaxed, dynamically hot systems; and mass loss rates from O and
|
|
W-R stars ($\dot{M}\sim10^{-6}\,M_{\sun}\,{\rm
|
|
yr^{-1}}\,(10\,M_{\sun})^{-1}$) in young, dense star clusters near the
|
|
centers of galaxies with sufficient cold gas for continued star
|
|
formation can yield rates as high as $\sim10^{-2}$ of Eddington.
|
|
|
|
Even though these fueling mechanisms do not involve mergers, the scenario
|
|
we have discussed might still be relevant to the origin of these black holes. Of
|
|
course, the black holes and spheroids in disk-dominated systems may
|
|
have produced in a manner that did not involve mergers.
|
|
Alternatively, most of the black hole mass in these objects (which is
|
|
small compared to that in spheroid-dominated galaxies) could have been
|
|
assembled long ago in mergers with bright quasar phases and then these
|
|
``dead'' quasars are resurrected sporadically by other fueling
|
|
mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
Independent of how these black holes were formed, elements of our
|
|
modeling may still account for certain observed properties of Seyferts. The
|
|
observed Seyfert luminosity function appears to join smoothly onto the
|
|
quasar luminosity function \citep{Hao05}. It is not obvious that this
|
|
would be the case if the two types of objects are produced by entirely
|
|
distinct mechanisms. In addressing this, it is useful to
|
|
separate the process by which gas is delivered to the black hole from
|
|
the subsequent evolution that determines the observed activity. In
|
|
our picture, gas is delivered to the black hole by gravitational
|
|
torques during a merger, but other mechanisms, like bar-induced
|
|
fueling may be important for objects such as Seyferts. Regardless,
|
|
the induced activity may be generic, if black hole growth is
|
|
self-regulated in the way we describe it in our simulations.
|
|
|
|
In Hopkins et al. (2005f) we show that the faint end slope of the
|
|
quasar luminosity function in our model is partly determined by the
|
|
time dependence of the ``blowout'' phase of black hole growth. We
|
|
derive an analytical model for this using a Sedov-Taylor type analysis
|
|
and show that the impact of this feedback depends on the mass of the
|
|
host. This analysis does not depend on the fueling mechanism, only on
|
|
the subsequent evolution. If this self-regulated growth applies to
|
|
Seyferts as well (for example if Seyfert growth is regulated by a
|
|
balance between accretion feedback and the spheroid potential, as
|
|
expected if these objects obey a similar $M_{\rm BH}-\sigma$
|
|
relation), we would expect the Seyfert luminosity function to smoothly
|
|
join onto the quasar one, even if the fuel is delivered in a different
|
|
manner.
|
|
|
|
\section{Conclusions}
|
|
\label{sec:finis}
|
|
|
|
We have studied the evolution of quasars in simulations of galaxy
|
|
mergers spanning a wide region of parameter space. In agreement with
|
|
earlier work \citep{H05a}, we find that the lifetime of a particular
|
|
source depends on luminosity and increases at lower luminosities, and
|
|
that quasar obscuration is time-dependent. Our new, large set of
|
|
simulations shows that the lifetime and obscuration can be expressed
|
|
in terms of the instantaneous and peak luminosities of a quasar and
|
|
that these descriptions are robust, with no systematic dependence on
|
|
simulation parameters. We have combined these results with a
|
|
semi-empirical method to describe the cosmological distribution of
|
|
quasar properties, allowing us to predict a large number of
|
|
observables as a function of e.g.\ luminosity and redshift. This
|
|
approach also makes it possible to compare our picture to simpler
|
|
models for quasar lifetimes and obscuration.
|
|
|
|
In the model we examine, quasars are triggered by mergers of gas-rich
|
|
galaxies, which produce inflows of gas through gravitational torquing,
|
|
fueling starbursts and rapid black hole growth. The large gas
|
|
densities obscure the central black hole at optical wavelengths until
|
|
feedback energy from the growth of the black hole ejects gas and
|
|
rapidly slows further accretion (``blowout''). Quasar lifetimes and
|
|
light curves are non-trivial, with strong accretion activity during
|
|
first passage of the merging galaxies and extended quiescent
|
|
(sub-Eddington) phases leading into and out of the phase of peak
|
|
quasar activity associated with the final merger. The ``blowout''
|
|
phase in which the quasar is visible as a bright, near-Eddington
|
|
optical source has a lifetime related to the dynamical time in the
|
|
inner regions of the merging galaxies, which characterizes the
|
|
timescale over which obscuring gas and dust are expelled, but the
|
|
quasar spends a longer time at lower luminosities before and after
|
|
this stage. These evolutionary processes have important consequences
|
|
which cannot be captured in models of pure exponential or ``on/off''
|
|
quasar growth.
|
|
|
|
Our work emphasizes several goals for quasar and galaxy observations
|
|
and theory. Observationally, it is important to constrain the faint
|
|
end of the {\em peak} luminosity distribution; i.e.\ the low-mass
|
|
active black hole distribution. Unfortunately, our modeling of quasar
|
|
lifetimes implies that the faint-end quasar luminosity function is
|
|
dominated by quasars with peak luminosities around the break in the
|
|
luminosity function, and can provide only weak constraints on the
|
|
faint-end $\Lp$ distribution. However, there is still hope, as for
|
|
example broad-line quasar activity is more closely associated with
|
|
near-peak luminosities, and thus probing the faint-end of broad-line
|
|
luminosity functions may in particular improve the estimates.
|
|
Moreover, studies of the black hole mass distribution (or the
|
|
distribution of galaxy spheroids) as a function of redshift, extending
|
|
to small spheroid masses/velocity dispersions probes the faint end of
|
|
$\nLp$. Other techniques, such as studies of faint radio sources at
|
|
high redshift \citep{HQB04} can similarly constrain these populations.
|
|
Furthermore, the calculations in this paper can be combined to better
|
|
determine $\nLp$, as, given a model for the quasar lifetime and
|
|
obscuration, they all derive from this fundamental quantity.
|
|
Additional observational tests of the modeling we have presented will
|
|
provide an important means of constraining models for AGN accretion
|
|
and feedback; for example, the faint-end slope of the quasar lifetime
|
|
depends on how the ``blowout'' phase occurs and could provide a
|
|
sensitive probe of feedback models, enabling the adoption of more
|
|
realistic and sophisticated feedback prescriptions than we have thus
|
|
far employed. Of course, improved constraints on the luminosity
|
|
function at all luminosities at high redshift remains a valuable means
|
|
of testing theories of quasar evolution.
|
|
|
|
Our simulations are based on isolated galaxy mergers, and thus do not
|
|
provide a cosmological prediction for the distribution of peak
|
|
luminosities $\nLp$, merger rates, or mass functions - we instead have
|
|
adopted a semi-empirical model, in which we use our modeling of quasar
|
|
evolution to determine these distributions from the observed
|
|
luminosity function. While this allows us to predict a large number
|
|
of observables and to demonstrate that a wide range of quasar and
|
|
galaxy properties are self-consistent in a model of merger-driven
|
|
quasar activity with realistic quasar lifetimes, future theoretical
|
|
work in these areas should predict the distribution of peak
|
|
luminosities $\nLp$ and its evolution with redshift. These quantities
|
|
are to be distinguished from the distribution of observed
|
|
luminosities, as the two are not trivially related in our model or any
|
|
other with a non-trivial quasar lifetime.
|
|
|
|
Although the quasar birthrate as a function of peak luminosity will
|
|
be, in general, a complicated function of galaxy merger rates, gas
|
|
fractions, morphologies, and other factors, we have parameterized it
|
|
for comparison with the results of future cosmological simulations and
|
|
semi-analytical models. This distribution is particularly valuable as
|
|
a theoretical quantity because it is more directly related to physical
|
|
galaxy properties than even the complete (intrinsic) luminosity
|
|
function, and additionally because theoretical modeling which
|
|
successfully reproduces this $\nLp$ distribution is guaranteed to
|
|
reproduce the large number of observable quantities we have discussed
|
|
in detail in this work. We cannot determine the cosmological context
|
|
in our detailed simulations of the relatively small-scale physics of
|
|
galaxy mergers, and conversely, cosmological simulations and
|
|
semi-analytical models cannot resolve the detailed physics driving
|
|
quasar activity in mergers. However, our determination of quasar
|
|
evolution as a function of peak luminosity or final black hole mass
|
|
can be grafted onto these cosmological models to greatly increase the
|
|
effective dynamic range of such calculations. Combined with our
|
|
modeling, this would remove the one significant empirical element we
|
|
have adopted, and allow for a complete prediction of the above
|
|
quantities from a single theoretical framework.
|
|
|
|
In these efforts, we emphasize that the mergers relevant to our
|
|
picture are of a specific type. First, the merging galaxies must
|
|
contain a supply of cold gas in a rotationally supported disk. Hot,
|
|
diffuse gas, as in the halos of elliptical galaxies, will not be
|
|
subject to the gravitational torques which drive gas into galaxy
|
|
centers and fuel black hole growth. Clearly, gas-poor mergers are also
|
|
not important for this process. Second, the mergers will likely
|
|
involve galaxies of comparable, although not necessarily equal, mass,
|
|
so that the gravitational torques excited are strong enough and
|
|
penetrate deep enough into galaxy centers to drive substantial inflows
|
|
of gas. The precise requirement for the mass ratio is somewhat
|
|
ill-defined because it also depends on the orbit geometry, but mergers
|
|
with a mass ratio larger than $10 : 1$ are probably not generally
|
|
important to our model. Simulations of minor mergers involving
|
|
galaxies with mass ratios $\lesssim 10:1$ (e.g.\ Hernquist 1989; Hernquist
|
|
\& Mihos 1995) have shown that for particular orbital geometries,
|
|
these events can produce starbursts similar to those in major mergers,
|
|
leaving behind disturbed remnants with dynamically heated disks (e.g.\
|
|
Quinn et al.\ 1993; Mihos et al.\ 1995; Walker et al.\ 1996). It is
|
|
of interest to establish whether black hole growth can also be
|
|
triggered in minor mergers, as these events may be relevant to weak
|
|
AGN activity like that in some Seyfert galaxies or LINERs.
|
|
|
|
In summary, the work presented here supports the conjecture that many
|
|
aspects of galaxy formation and evolution can be understood in terms
|
|
of the ``cosmic cycle'' in Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle}. To be sure,
|
|
much of what is summarized in Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle} has been
|
|
proposed elsewhere, either in the context of observations or
|
|
theoretical models. Our modeling of galaxy formation and evolution
|
|
emphasizes the possibility that supermassive black holes could be {\it
|
|
responsible} for much of what goes on in shaping galaxies, rather than
|
|
being bystanders, closing the loop in Figure~\ref{fig:cosmiccycle}.
|
|
In this sense, black holes may be the ``prime movers'' driving galaxy
|
|
evolution, as has been proposed earlier for extragalactic radio
|
|
sources (e.g.\ Begelman, Blandford \& Rees 1984; Rees 1984). It may
|
|
seem counterintuitive that compact objects with masses much smaller
|
|
than those of galaxies could have such an impact, but it is precisely
|
|
the concentrated nature of matter in black holes that makes this idea
|
|
plausible.
|
|
|
|
Consider a black hole of mass $M_{\rm BH}$ at the center of a
|
|
spherical galaxy of mass $M_{\rm sph}$ with a characteristic velocity
|
|
dispersion $\sigma$. The energy available to affect the galaxy
|
|
through the growth of the black hole will be some small fraction of
|
|
its rest-mass, $E_{\rm feed} \sim \epsilon_f M_{\rm BH} c^2$. This
|
|
can be compared with the binding energy of the galaxy, $E_{\rm bind}
|
|
\sim M_{\rm sph} \sigma^2$. Observations indicate that $M_{\rm BH}$
|
|
and $M_{\rm sph}$ are correlated and that, roughly $M_{\rm BH} \sim
|
|
(0.002 - 0.005) M_{\rm sph}$ (Magorrian et al.\ 1998; Marconi \& Hunt
|
|
2003). Therefore, the ratio of the feedback energy to the binding
|
|
energy of the galaxy is $E_{\rm feed} / E_{\rm sph} > 10
|
|
\epsilon_{f,-2} \, \sigma_{300}^{-2}$, for an assumed efficiency of
|
|
1\%, $\epsilon_{f,-2} \equiv \epsilon /0.01$ and scaling the velocity
|
|
dispersion to $\sigma_{300} \equiv \sigma / 300$ km/sec, as for
|
|
relatively massive galaxies. This result demonstrates that the
|
|
supermassive black holes in the centers of spheroidal galaxies are by
|
|
far the largest supply of potential energy in these objects, exceeding
|
|
even the galaxy binding energy. When viewed in this way, if even a
|
|
small fraction of the black hole radiant energy can couple to the
|
|
surrounding ISM, then black hole growth is not an implausible
|
|
mechanism for regulating galaxy formation and evolution; in fact, it
|
|
appears almost inevitable that it should play this role.
|
|
|
|
\acknowledgments We thank our referee, David Weinberg, for many
|
|
comments and suggestions that greatly improved this paper. We
|
|
thank Paul Martini, for
|
|
helpful discussion, and Gordon Richards and Alessandro Marconi, for
|
|
generously providing data for observational comparisons. This work
|
|
was supported in part by NSF grants ACI 96-19019, AST 00-71019, AST
|
|
02-06299, and AST 03-07690, and NASA ATP grants NAG5-12140,
|
|
NAG5-13292, and NAG5-13381. The simulations were performed at the
|
|
Center for Parallel Astrophysical Computing at the Harvard-Smithsonian
|
|
Center for Astrophysics.
|
|
|
|
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\clearpage
|
|
%\begin{deluxetable}{llllllllllll}
|
|
\begin{deluxetable}{cccccccccccc}
|
|
\tabletypesize{\scriptsize}
|
|
\tablecaption{Mock Quasar Distribution Examples \label{tbl:montecarlo}}
|
|
\tablewidth{0pt}
|
|
\tablehead{
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{1}$\Lp$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{2}$M_{\rm BH}^{f}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{3}$L$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{4}$M_{\rm BH}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{5}$\nh$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{6}$\nhi$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{7}$L_{B}^{\rm i}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{8}$L_{SX}^{\rm i}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{9}$L_{HX}^{\rm i}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{10}$L_{B}^{\rm obs}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{11}$L_{SX}^{\rm obs}$} &
|
|
\colhead{\tablenotemark{12}$L_{HX}^{\rm obs}$}
|
|
}
|
|
\startdata
|
|
10.6 & 6.1 & 8.5 & 6.1 & 20.5 & 20.1 & 7.2\ \ 7.5 & 7.4\ \ 6.8 & 7.6\ \ 7.0 & 7.2\ \ 7.4 & 7.4\ \ 6.8 & 7.6\ \ 7.0 \\
|
|
10.4 & 6.4 & 8.7 & 6.0 & 22.2 & 22.0 & 7.4\ \ 7.6 & 7.6\ \ 7.0 & 7.8\ \ 7.2 & 5.8\ \ 6.0 & 7.5\ \ 6.9 & 7.8\ \ 7.2 \\
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... & & & & & & & & & & &
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\enddata
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\tablenotetext{1}{Peak quasar bolometric luminosity, $\log_{10}(\Lp/L_{\sun})$}
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\tablenotetext{2}{Final (post-merger) black hole mass, $\log_{10}(M_{\rm BH}^{f}/M_{\sun})$}
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\tablenotetext{3}{Current (at time of ``observation'') intrinsic (no attenuation)
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bolometric luminosity, $\log_{10}(L/L_{\sun})$}
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\tablenotetext{4}{Current black hole mass, $\log_{10}(M_{\rm BH}/M_{\sun})$}
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\tablenotetext{5}{Total (neutral+ionized) hydrogen
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column density along the ``observed'' sightline, $\log_{10}(N_{\rm H}/{\rm cm}^{-2})$}
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\tablenotetext{6}{Neutral hydrogen
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column density along the ``observed'' sightline, $\log_{10}(N_{\rm H\, I}/{\rm cm}^{-2})$}
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\tablenotetext{7}{Intrinsic (no attenuation) B-band luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{B}^{\rm i}/L_{\sun})$,
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where $L_{B}=\nu_{B}L_{\nu_{B}}$ at $\nu_{B}=4400$\AA.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Calculated with the luminosity-dependent
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bolometric corrections from (Marconi et al.\ 2004; left), }
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{and constant (luminosity-independent) $L=11.8\,L_{B}$ (Elvis et al.\ 1994; right).}
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\tablenotetext{8}{Intrinsic soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV) luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{SX}^{\rm i}/L_{\sun})$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Calculated with the luminosity-dependent
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bolometric corrections from (Marconi et al.\ 2004; left), }
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{and constant (luminosity-independent) $L=52.5\,L_{SX}$ (Elvis et al.\ 1994; right).}
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\tablenotetext{9}{Intrinsic hard X-ray (2-10 keV) luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{HX}^{\rm i}/L_{\sun})$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Calculated with the luminosity-dependent
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bolometric corrections from (Marconi et al.\ 2004; left), }
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{and constant (luminosity-independent) $L=35.0\,L_{HX}$ (Elvis et al.\ 1994; right).}
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\tablenotetext{10}{``Observed'' (with attenuation) B-band luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{B}^{\rm obs}/L_{\sun})$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Left and right use luminosity-dependent and luminosity-independent bolometric corrections, respectively, as $L_{B}^{\rm i}$.}
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\tablenotetext{11}{``Observed'' soft X-ray luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{SX}^{\rm obs}/L_{\sun})$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Left and right use luminosity-dependent and luminosity-independent bolometric corrections, respectively, as $L_{SX}^{\rm i}$.}
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\tablenotetext{12}{``Observed'' hard X-ray luminosity, $\log_{10}(L_{HX}^{\rm obs}/L_{\sun})$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{Left and right use luminosity-dependent and luminosity-independent bolometric corrections, respectively, as $L_{HX}^{\rm i}$.}
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{ \ }
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\tablenotetext{ \ }{The complete tables
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can be downloaded at \url{ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/phopkins/qso\_catalogs/}}
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\end{deluxetable}
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\end{document}
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