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      Coevolution (Or Not) of Supermassive Black Holes and Host Galaxies

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          Abstract

          We review the observed demographics and inferred evolution of supermassive black holes (BHs) found by dynamical modeling of spatially resolved kinematics. Most influential was the discovery of a tight correlation between BH mass and the velocity dispersion of the host-galaxy bulge. It and other correlations led to the belief that BHs and bulges coevolve by regulating each other's growth. New results are now replacing this simple story with a richer and more plausible picture in which BHs correlate differently with different galaxy components. BHs are found in pure-disk galaxies, so classical (elliptical-galaxy-like) bulges are not necessary to grow BHs. But BHs do not correlate with galaxy disks. And any correlations with disk-grown pseudobulges or halo dark matter are so weak as to imply no close coevolution. We suggest that there are four regimes of BH feedback. 1- Local, stochastic feeding of small BHs in mainly bulgeless galaxies involves too little energy to result in coevolution. 2- Global feeding in major, wet galaxy mergers grows giant BHs in short, quasar-like "AGN" events whose feedback does affect galaxies. This makes classical bulges and coreless-rotating ellipticals. 3- At the highest BH masses, maintenance-mode feedback into X-ray gas has the negative effect of helping to keep baryons locked up in hot gas. This happens in giant, core-nonrotating ellipticals. They inherit coevolution magic from smaller progenitors. 4- Independent of any feedback physics, the averaging that results from successive mergers helps to engineer tight BH correlations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          29 April 2013
          Article
          10.1146/annurev-astro-082708-101811
          1304.7762
          d76f7f0f-16c1-4eba-9095-5c5c2d730b2f

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
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          136 pages, 38 postscript figures, 4 tables; requires cittable.tex, psfig.tex, annrev4K-E.tex; accepted for publication in Volume 51 (2013) of Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics; Supplementary Information will be submitted to arXiv separately in approximately 2013 June
          astro-ph.CO

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