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Supermassive black hole mass growth in infrared-luminous gas-rich galaxy mergers and potential power of (sub)millimeter H2O megamaser observations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 February 2024
Abstract
We present our systematic infrared and (sub)millimeter spectroscopic observations of gas/dust-rich merging ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) to scrutinize deeply buried AGNs (mass-accreting supermassive black holes [SMBHs]). We have found signatures of optically elusive, but intrinsically luminous buried AGNs in a large fraction of nearby (z < 0.3) ULIRGs, suggesting that SMBH mass growth is ongoing in the ULIRG population. Using ALMA, we have detected compact (<100 pc), very luminous (>104Lʘ), AGN-origin, 183 GHz (1.6 mm) H2O megamaser emission in one merging ULIRG, demonstrating that the megamaser emission can be a very powerful tool to dynamically estimate SMBH masses, with the smallest modeling uncertainty of kpc-wide stellar and gas mass distribution, at dusty ULIRGs’ nuclei, because of minimum extinction effects at millimeter. We present our current results and future prospect for the study of the SMBH mass growth in gas/dust-rich galaxy mergers, using (sub)millimeter AGN-origin H2O megamaser emission lines.
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- © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of International Astronomical Union