{ "id": "1805.01467", "version": "v1", "published": "2018-05-03T18:00:00.000Z", "updated": "2018-05-03T18:00:00.000Z", "title": "A Population of Bona Fide Intermediate Mass Black Holes Identified as Low Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei", "authors": [ "Igor V. Chilingarian", "Ivan Yu. Katkov", "Ivan Yu. Zolotukhin", "Kirill A. Grishin", "Yuri Beletsky", "Konstantina Boutsia", "David J. Osip" ], "comment": "18 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables (table 3 is available for download as ancillary file); submitted to ApJ", "categories": [ "astro-ph.GA", "astro-ph.CO", "astro-ph.HE" ], "abstract": "Nearly every massive galaxy harbors a supermassive black hole (SMBH) in its nucleus. SMBH masses are millions to billions $M_{\\odot}$, and they correlate with properties of spheroids of their host galaxies. While the SMBH growth channels, mergers and gas accretion, are well established, their origin remains uncertain: they could have either emerged from massive \"seeds\" ($10^5-10^6 M_{\\odot}$) formed by direct collapse of gas clouds in the early Universe or from smaller ($100 M_{\\odot}$) black holes, end-products of first stars. The latter channel would leave behind numerous intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs, $10^2-10^5 M_{\\odot}$). Although many IMBH candidates have been identified, none is accepted as definitive, thus their very existence is still debated. Using data mining in wide-field sky surveys and applying dedicated analysis to archival and follow-up optical spectra, we identified a sample of 305 IMBH candidates having masses $3\\times10^4