Sołtan argument
The Sołtan argument is an astrophysical theory outlined in 1982 by Polish astronomer. It maintains that if quasars were powered by accretion onto a supermassive black hole, then such supermassive black holes must exist in our local universe as "dead" quasars.
History
As early as 1969, Donald Lynden-Bell wrote a paper suggesting that "dead quasars" were found at the center of the Milky Way and nearby galaxies by arguing that given the quasar-number counts, luminosities, distances, and the efficiency of accretion into a "Schwarzschild throat" through the last stable circular orbit, roughly 1010 quasars existed in the observable universe. This number density of "dead quasars" was attributed by Lynden-Bell to high mass-to-light ratio objects found at the center of galaxies. This is essentially the Sołtan argument, though the direct connection between black hole masses and quasar luminosity functions is missing. In the paper, Lynden-Bell also suggests some radical ideas that are now fully integrated into modern understanding of astrophysics including the model that accretion disks are supported by magnetic fields, that extragalactic cosmic rays are accelerated in them, and he estimates to within an order of magnitude the masses of several of the closest supermassive black holes including the ones in the Milky Way, M31, M32, M81, M82, M87, and NGC 4151.Thirteen years later, Sołtan explicitly showed that the luminosity of quasars was due to the accretion rate of mass onto black holes given by:
where
- is the efficiency factor
- is the time rate of mass falling into the black hole
- is the speed of light
Sołtan calculated the mass density of accreted material as it is directly related to the energy density of quasar light. He derived a value of approximately 1014 solar masses per cubic Gigaparsec. This mass would be discretely distributed ; given an average mass of approximately ten million solar masses, it would be statistically likely for a "dead quasar" to be within a few megaparsecs of Earth.
At this time, evidence was already accumulating that supermassive black holes were found at the center of large galaxies, which are distributed approximately on the order of a megaparsec apart from each other. This argument therefore made a reasonable case that supermassive black holes were at one time ultraluminous quasars.
The first quantitative estimates of the mass density in supermassive black holes were 5-10 times higher than Sołtan's estimate. This discrepancy was resolved in 2000 via the discovery of the M–sigma relation, which showed that most of the previously published black hole masses were in error.