Recent dynamical evidence indicates that supermassive black holes reside at the center of most nearby galaxies. The available data (about 30 objects) show a strong correlation (but with a large scatter) between bulge and black hole mass [38], with Mbh = 0.006 Mbulge as a best-fit. The total mass density in spheroids today is bulge = 0.0036+0.0024-0.0017 [16], implying a mean mass density of dead quasars
Since the observed energy density from all quasars is equal to the
emitted energy divided by the average quasar redshift
[49], the
total contribution to the EBL from accretion onto black holes is
where 0.1
is the efficiency for transforming accreted rest-mass
energy into radiation (in units of 10%). Quasars at
z 2 could then
make a significant contribution to the brightness of the
night sky if dust-obscured accretion onto supermassive black holes is an
efficient process
[21],
[14]
(4).
4 It might be interesting to note
in this context that a population of AGNs with strong intrinsic
absorption (Type
II quasars) is actually invoked in many current models for the X-ray
background
[33],
[7].