4.7 Article

The low end of the supermassive black hole mass function: Constraining the mass of a nuclear black hole in NGC 205 via stellar kinematics

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 628, Issue 1, Pages 137-152

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/430752

Keywords

galaxies : elliptical and lenticular, cD; galaxies : nuclei; galaxies : structure; stellar dynamics

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Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images and spectra of the nucleated dwarf elliptical galaxy NGC 205 are combined with three-integral axisymmetric dynamical models to constrain the mass M-BH of a putative nuclear black hole. This is only the second attempt, after M33, to use resolved stellar kinematics to search for a nuclear black hole with mass below 106 solar masses. We are unable to identify a best-fit value of MBH in NGC 205; however, the data impose a upper limit of 2.2 x 10(4) M circle dot (1 sigma confidence) and an upper limit of 3.8 x 10(4) M circle dot (3 sigma confidence). This upper limit is consistent with the extrapolation of the M-BH-sigma relation to the M-BH < 10(6) M circle dot regime. If we assume that NGC 205 and M33 both contain nuclear black holes, the upper limits on MBH in the two galaxies imply a slope of similar to 5.5 or greater for the M-BH-sigma relation. We use our three-integral models to evaluate the relaxation time and stellar collision time in NGC 205; T-r is similar to 10(8) yr or less in the nucleus, and T-coll approximate to 10(11) yr. The low value of Tr is consistent with core collapse having already occurred, but we are unable to draw conclusions from nuclear morphology about the presence or absence of a massive black hole.

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