Measuring the Angular Momentum of Supermassive Black Holes (Springerbriefs in Astronomy) (Paperback)
I. Introduction on importance of black hole spin.- II. Description of spectroscopic techniques used to measure spin in AGN.- III. Review of current spin measurements.- IV. Implications for the growth of black holes and their host galaxies.- V. Future Directions.
Dr. Brenneman received her B.A. in Astrophysics in 1999 from Williams College (Williamstown, MA), and her Ph.D. in Astronomy in 2007 from the University of Maryland (College Park, MD). She held a NASA postdoctoral fellowship at the Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, MD) from 2007-2009, and is presently a postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (Cambridge, MA). She is the author of several research papers on the topic of black hole angular momentum in active galaxies, including the first published constraint on spin in a supermassive black hole (2006), and a Sky & Telescope cover story on spinning black holes (May 2011). She is currently working to measure black hole spin in a large sample of active galaxies, and to understand the role that spin plays in the growth and evolution of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies.