4.7 Article

A 5 x 109 M⊙ BLACK HOLE IN NGC 1277 FROM ADAPTIVE OPTICS SPECTROSCOPY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 817, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/817/1/2

Keywords

black hole physics; galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD; galaxies: individual (NGC 1277); galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; galaxies: nuclei

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion Productiva (Argentina) [GN-2011B-Q-27]

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The nearby lenticular galaxy NGC 1277 is thought to host one of the largest black holes known, however the black hole mass measurement is based on low spatial resolution spectroscopy. In this paper, we present Gemini Near-infrared Integral Field Spectrometer observations assisted by adaptive optics. We map out the galaxy's stellar kinematics within similar to 440 pc of the nucleus with an angular resolution that allows us to probe well within the region where the potential from the black hole dominates. We find that the stellar velocity dispersion rises dramatically, reaching similar to 550 km s(-1) at the center. Through orbit-based, stellar-dynamical models we obtain a black hole mass of (4.9 +/- 1.6). x. 10(9) M-circle dot (1 sigma uncertainties). Although the black hole mass measurement is smaller by a factor of similar to 3 compared to previous claims based on large-scale kinematics, NGC 1277 does indeed contain one of the most massive black holes detected to date, and the black hole mass is an order of magnitude larger than expectations from the empirical relation between black hole mass and galaxy luminosity. Given the galaxy's similarities to the higher redshift (z similar to 2) massive quiescent galaxies, NGC 1277 could be a relic, passively evolving since that period. A population of local analogs to the higher redshift quiescent galaxies that also contain over-massive black holes may suggest that black hole growth precedes that of the host galaxy.

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