%APesce, Dominic%APalumbo, Daniel%ANarayan, Ramesh%ABlackburn, Lindy%ADoeleman, Sheperd%AJohnson, Michael%AMa, Chung-Pei%ANagar, Neil%ANatarajan, Priyamvada%ARicarte, Angelo%BJournal Name: The Astrophysical Journal; Journal Volume: 923; Journal Issue: 2 %D2021%I %JJournal Name: The Astrophysical Journal; Journal Volume: 923; Journal Issue: 2 %K %MOSTI ID: 10319210 %PMedium: X %TToward Determining the Number of Observable Supermassive Black Hole Shadows %XAbstract We present estimates for the number of shadow-resolved supermassive black hole (SMBH) systems that can be detected using radio interferometers, as a function of angular resolution, flux density sensitivity, and observing frequency. Accounting for the distribution of SMBHs across mass, redshift, and accretion rate, we use a new semianalytic spectral energy distribution model to derive the number of SMBHs with detectable and optically thin horizon-scale emission. We demonstrate that (sub)millimeter interferometric observations with ∼0.1 μ as resolution and ∼1 μ Jy sensitivity could access >10 6 SMBH shadows. We then further decompose the shadow source counts into the number of black holes for which we could expect to observe the first- and second-order lensed photon rings. Accessing the bulk population of first-order photon rings requires ≲2 μ as resolution and ≲0.5 mJy sensitivity, whereas doing the same for second-order photon rings requires ≲0.1 μ as resolution and ≲5 μ Jy sensitivity. Our model predicts that with modest improvements to sensitivity, as many as ∼5 additional horizon-resolved sources should become accessible to the current Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), whereas a next-generation EHT observing at 345 GHz should have access to ∼3 times as many sources. More generally, our results can help guide enhancements of current arrays and specifications for future interferometric experiments that aim to spatially resolve a large population of SMBH shadows or higher-order photon rings. %0Journal Article