Misty C. Bentz
Quick Facts
Biography
Misty C. Bentz (born July 4, 1980) is an American astrophysicist and Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Georgia State University. She is best known for her work on supermassive black hole mass measurements and black hole scaling relationships.
Career
Bentz studied physics and astronomy at the University of Washington and received her PhD in Astronomy at The Ohio State University in 2007. Bentz was a postdoctoral researcher (2007–2009) and a NASA Hubble Fellow (2009–2010) at the University of California, Irvine. In 2010, she joined the faculty of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Georgia State University.
Work
Bentz is most well known for her work using reverberation mapping to determine the masses of supermassive black holes in the center of active galaxies. She currently maintains The AGN Black Hole Mass Database which gives SMBH mass measurements for over 60 active galaxies. Using these SMBH mass measurements, Bentz has also contributed to calibration of several black hole scaling relationships. These relationships include black hole mass to galaxy stellar mass and broad-line region radius to AGN luminosity. The calibration of these relationships allows black hole mass estimates to be compiled for large statistical samples, and they provide observational constraints for large high-resolution hydrodynamical cosmological simulations meant to probe galaxy formation and evolution over cosmic time, e.g. the Illustris and Horizon-AGN simulations.
In 2013, Bentz was selected as one of twenty-two astronomers to chart the road map of NASA astrophysics for the next thirty years. She also was the technical editor of the 4th edition of Astronomy for Dummies. She is regularly quoted in popular media, such as Popular Science, Business Insider, Live Science, and Mashable, regarding black holes.