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9. SOME IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

The SMBH hunting game is rapidly becoming a rather mature subject. I think we have progressed from the era of "the thrill of discovery" to a point where we are on the verge of using SMBHs as astrophysical tools. In this spirit, let me remark on a few of the ramifications of the existing observations and point out some of the more urgent directions that should be pursued.

A. The Mbullet-Mbul relation. The apparent correlation between the mass of the central BH and the mass of the bulge, if borne out by future scrutiny, has significant implications (see below). From an observational point of view, the highest immediate priority is to populate the Mbullet-Mbul diagram with objects spanning a wide range in luminosity, with the eventual aim of deriving a mass function for SMBHs. The samples should be chosen with the following questions in mind. (1) Is the apparent trend a true correlation or does it instead trace an upper envelope? (2) If the relation is real, is it linear? (3) What is the magnitude of the intrinsic scatter? And (4) is there a minimum bulge luminosity (mass) below which SMBHs do not exist?

In the near future, the most efficient way to obtain mass measurements for relatively large numbers of galaxies is to exploit the capabilities of STIS on HST. Several large programs are in progress. Although VLBI spectroscopy of H2O masers delivers much higher angular resolution, this technique is limited by the availability of suitably bright sources. Conditions which promote H2O megamaser emission evidently are realized in only a tiny fraction of galaxies (Braatz, Wilson, & Henkel 1996).

B. The formation of SMBHs. The Mbullet-Mbul relation offers some clues to the formation mechanism of SMBHs. How does a galaxy know how to extract a constant, or at least a limiting, fraction of its bulge mass into a SMBH? An attractive possibility is by the normal dynamical evolution of the galaxy core itself. The spheroidal component of nearby galaxies can attain very high central stellar densities - up to 105 Msun pc-3 (Faber et al. 1997) - and some with distinct nuclei have even higher concentrations still (Lauer et al. 1995). Although most galaxy cores are unlikely to have experienced dynamical collapse (Kormendy 1988c), the innermost regions have much shorter relaxation times, especially when considering a realistic stellar mass spectrum because the segregation of the most massive stars toward the center greatly accelerates the dynamical evolution of the system. Lee (1995, and these proceedings) shows that, under conditions typical of galactic nuclei, core collapse and merging of stellar-size BHs can easily form a seed BH of moderate mass. Alternatively, the seed object may form via the catastrophic collapse of a relativistic cluster of compact remnants (Quinlan & Shapiro 1990). In either case, subsequent accretion of gas and stars will augment the central mass, and, over a Hubble time, may produce the distribution of masses observed. It is far too premature to tell whether SMBHs form through the secular evolution of galaxies, as suggested here, through processes associated with the initial formation of galaxies (e.g., Rees 1984, 1998; Silk & Rees 1998), or both, depending on the galaxy type (elliptical vs. spiral galaxies). But the stage is set for a serious discussion. More sophisticated modeling of the growth of SMBHs that take into account a wider range of initial conditions in galactic nuclei (e.g., relaxing the adiabatic assumption or adopting more realistic density profiles for the stellar distribution) may eventually yield testable predictions (see, e.g., Stiavelli 1998).

C. Influence of SMBHs on galactic structure. Norman, May, & Van Albada (1985) showed through N-body simulations that a massive singularity in the center of a triaxial galaxy destroys the box-like stellar orbits and hence can erase the nonaxisymmetry, at least on small scales. This has several important consequences. First, it implies that the presence of a SMBH can influence the global structure and dynamics of galaxies. Second, the secular evolution of the axisymmetry of the central potential points to a natural mechanism for galaxies to self-regulate the transfer of angular momentum of the gas from large to small scales. This negative-feedback process may limit the growth of the central BH and the accretion rate onto it, and hence may serve as a promising framework for understanding the physical evolution of AGNs. Merritt & Quinlan (1998) find that the timescale for effecting the transition from triaxiality to axisymmetry depends strongly on the fractional mass of the BH; the evolution occurs rapidly when Mbullet / Mbul gtapprox 2.5%, remarkably close to the observational upper limit (Fig. 8 a).

D. The origin of central cores. It is not understood why giant ellipticals have such shallow central light profiles. "Cores" do not develop naturally in popular scenarios of structure formation, and even if they form, they are difficult to maintain against the subsequent acquisition of the dense, central regions of satellite galaxies that get accreted (Faber et al. 1997). Moreover, the very presence of a SMBH, whether it grew adiabatically in a preexisting stellar system or the galaxy formed by violent relaxation around it (Stiavelli 1998), ought to imprint a more sharply cusped light profile (see Section 2) than is observed. An intriguing possibility is that cores were created as a result of mergers, where one or more of the galaxies contains a BH. As the single (Nakano & Makino 1998) or binary (Makino 1997; Quinlan & Hernquist 1997) BH sinks toward the center of the remnant due to dynamical friction, it heats the stars, thereby producing a "fluffy" core. If this interpretation is correct, it would provide a simple, powerful tool to diagnose the formation history of galaxies.

E. Why are the black holes so black? It has been somewhat puzzling how the BHs can remain so dormant. No doubt the dwindled gas supply in the present epoch, especially in ellipticals, is largely responsible for the inactivity. Yet the accretion rate cannot be zero; even in the absence of inflow from the general interstellar medium, some gas is shed through normal mass loss from the innermost evolved stars, and occasionally such stars get tidally disrupted (see below). If SMBHs are indeed present, the radiative efficiency of the accretion flow must be orders of magnitude lower than that of "standard" optically thick, geometrically thin disks. Such a situation may be realized in accretion flows where advection becomes important when the accretion rate is highly sub-Eddington (Narayan & Yi 1995; Abramowicz et al. 1995; Nakamura et al. 1996; Chakrabarti 1996). Sgr A* at the Galactic Center has a bolometric luminosity of only ~ 1037 ergs s-1, or Lbol / LEdd approx 3 × 10-8 (Narayan, Yi, & Mahadevan 1995); in the case of the LINER nucleus of M81 (Ho, Filippenko, & Sargent 1996), Lbol approx 1041 ergs s-1 and Lbol / LEdd ltapprox 10-4. The spectral energy distributions emitted by both objects differ dramatically from those of luminous AGNs and can be approximately matched by advective-disk models.

F. Tidal disruption of stars. The prevalence of SMBHs suggested by the existing evidence predicts a relatively high incidence of tidal disruptions of stars as they scatter into nearly radial orbits whose pericenters pass within the tidal radius of the BH (Rees 1998, and references therein). For a typical stellar density of 105 stars pc-3, Mbullet = 106-108 Msun, and sigma = 100-300 km s-1, a solar-type star will be disrupted once every 102-104 years. (BHs more massive than 108 Msun will swallow the star whole.) Roughly half the debris becomes unbound and half gets captured into an accretion disk which undergoes a bright flare (~ 1010 Lsun) lasting a few months to a year. The spectrum is expected to be mainly thermal and to peak in the extreme-UV and soft X-rays. The contribution to the near-UV and optical bands is uncertain; it depends on assumptions concerning the geometry of the accretion disk (thick or thin) and on whether an optically thick envelope can form. For plausible parameters, Ulmer (1998) estimates that a 107 Msun BH will produce a flare with an absolute magnitude of about -20 in U and -18.5 in V. The realization that SMBHs may be even more common than previously thought provides fresh motivation to search for such stellar flares; some observational strategies are mentioned by Rees (1998). Here, I wish to stress that quantifying the rate of stellar disruptions can be used as a tool to study the demography of SMBHs out to relatively large distances and hence should be regarded as complementary to the kinematic searches.

Acknowledgements

I am grateful to S. K. Chakrabarti for the invitation to participate in this workshop and his help in arranging a pleasurable visit to India. I thank G. A. Bower, S. Collier, R. Genzel, L. J. Greenhill, J. Kormendy, R. Maiolino, D. Maoz, E. Maoz, and K. Nandra for contributing to, or for providing comments that have improved the presentation of, the material in this paper. This work was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and by NASA grants from the Space Telescope Science Institute (operated by AURA, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555).

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