Coupled black hole and galaxy formation in the young universe
dc.contributor.author
Targett, Thomas Andrew
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:24:13Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:24:13Z
dc.date.issued
2007
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
This thesis presents results from three major imaging studies designed to determine
the properties of massive galaxies selected at high redshift. The most massive known
galaxies at high redshift (i.e. radio galaxies), the most massive known starbursts at
high redshift (i.e. submillimetre galaxies), and the most massive known black holes at
high redshifts (i.e. quasars) have been targeted, with the aim of better establishing the
relationship between these different classes of massive object.
en
dc.description.abstract
The results from deep K—band imaging of the most luminous radio galaxies at
z ~ 2 and the brightest submillimetre sources in the 8- mjy survey are presented. Morphological properties are measured and compared to explore whether submillimetre
hosts are the progenitors of today's most massive ellipticals. Two-dimensional modelling finds that the high-redshift radio galaxies have surface brightness distributions
consistent with those expected for classic ellipticals (Sersic parameter, n = 4), with n
in the range 2.5 < n < 5.75 and < n >= 4.04±0.27. In contrast, submillimetre galaxies
are found to be disks (Sersic parameter, n = 1) with n in the range 1.0 < n < 2.5 and
<n>=1.46±0.16. The half-light radii of the radio hosts are distributed over a range
2 <
r1/2 < 16kpc with < r1/2 >= 7.85 ± 1.2 kpc, while submillimetre sources are
smaller, with 1 < rq/2 < 6 kpc and < rq/2 >= 3.15 ± 0.29 kpc. The z ~ 2 radio galaxies
are found to be, on average, a factor ~ 2 smaller than massive radio galaxies at z < 1
and follow a Kormendy (/ie — re) relation similar to that of 3C-type galaxies at low
redshift after evolutionary corrections, assuming a burst-formation model at z = 3,
consistent with the median redshift of the submillimetre sources. The luminosities of
the submillimetre galaxies are ~ 1.5 magnitudes brighter than Lyman-break galaxies at comparable redshifts, indicating that submillimetre galaxies are significantly
more massive. Finally, surface mass densities for both source types are found to be
consistent with quiescent elliptical galaxies at high redshift, and not star-forming or
Lyman-break galaxies.
en
dc.description.abstract
The results are presented of a study that uses the 3CRR sample of radio-loud ac¬
tive galactic nuclei to investigate the evolution of the black-hole:spheroid mass ratio
in the most massive early-type galaxies from 0 < z < 2. Radio-loud unification is ex¬
ploited to obtain virial (linewidth) black hole mass estimates from the 3CRR quasars,
and stellar mass estimates from the 3CRR radio galaxies, thereby providing black
hole and stellar mass estimates for a single population of early-type galaxies. At low
redshift (z<l) the 3CRR sample is consistent with a black-hole:spheroid mass ratio
of Mbh/Mbulge ~ 0.002, in good agreement with that observed locally for quiescent
galaxies of similar stellar mass (Mbuige — 5 x 10u M0). However, over the redshift
interval 0 < z < 2 the 3CRR black-hole:spheroid mass ratio is found to evolve as
Mbh/Mbuige oc (1 + z)2-07±0-76/ reaching Mbh/Mbulge ~ 0.008 by redshift z ~ 2. If con¬
firmed, the detection of evolution in the 3CRR black-hole:spheroid mass ratio further
strengthens the evidence that, at least for massive early-type galaxies, the growth of
the central supermassive black hole may be completed before that of the host spheroid.
en
dc.description.abstract
The results from an ongoing project to constrain the evolution of the blackhole:spheroid mass ratio at z — 3,4 are presented. At these redshifts, quasars and
their hosts provide a unique window on this evolution, as the only class of object in
which both galaxy and black hole masses can be directly measured. Additionally, the
black-hole:bulge mass ratios of flat spectrum quasars at z ~ 1.5 are used to deter¬
mine whether the BLR in AGN possesses a spherical or disk-like morphology. It is
demonstrated that both black hole and host galaxy masses can be obtained from emis¬
sion linewidths and deep high-quality A-band imaging respectively. These pilot data
represent the first attempt to constrain the black-hole:spheroid mass ratio as part of a
statistically significant sample at z = 3,4, a crucial epoch of galaxy formation and
evolution.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/34179
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
Coupled black hole and galaxy formation in the young universe
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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