Abstract

Abstract Presently, it is unclear whether the Eddington ratio (λ) and radiative efficiency (ε) depend on a supermassive black hole's (SMBH's) redshift z and mass MBH. We attempt to resolve this issue using published data for 132,000 SMBHs with MBH ≥107 Msun (solar masses) at ∼ 0.1< z <2.4 covering ∼10 billion years of cosmic time, with MBH determined using Mg-II lines and bolometric luminosities Lbol based on a weighted mean of Lbol from 2 or more monochromatic luminosities and a single uniformly applied correction factor. The SMBHs are sorted into 7 MBH bins separated from each other by half an order of magnitude. The λ and z data in each bin are subjected to spline regression analysis. The results unambiguously show that for similar-size SMBHs, λ decreases as z decreases and that for a given redshift, larger SMBHs have a lower λ. These findings require that either a SMBH's accretion rate and/or its radiative efficiency be a function of z and MBH and, in the context of the Bondi accretion model, imply that radiative efficiency is an inverse function of z and MBH. These findings suggest that SMBHs become less efficient (higher ε) in accreting gases as the ambient gas density decreases with z and that larger SMBHs are more efficient (lower ε) than smaller ones. The results leave little doubt that the current widespread practice of assigning ε a standard value is untenable and gives erroneous estimates of accretion rates and growth times of SMBHs.

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