Detection of a 100,000 M-circle dot black hole in M31's Most Massive Globular Cluster: A Tidally Stripped Nucleus

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Date
2022
Volume
924
Issue
2
Journal
The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics : Part 1
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Publisher
London : Institute of Physics Publ.
Abstract

We investigate the presence of a central black hole (BH) in B023-G078, M31's most massive globular cluster. We present high-resolution, adaptive-optics assisted, integral-field spectroscopic kinematics from Gemini/NIFS that show a strong rotation (∼20 km s-1) and a velocity dispersion rise toward the center (37 km s-1). We combine the kinematic data with a mass model based on a two-component fit to HST ACS/HRC data of the cluster to estimate the mass of a putative BH. Our dynamical modeling suggests a >3σ detection of a BH component of (1σ uncertainties). The inferred stellar mass of the cluster is , consistent with previous estimates, thus the BH makes up 1.5% of its mass. We examine whether the observed kinematics are caused by a collection of stellar mass BHs by modeling an extended dark mass as a Plummer profile. The upper limit on the size scale of the extended mass is 0.56 pc (95% confidence), which does not rule out an extended mass. There is compelling evidence that B023-G078 is the tidally stripped nucleus of a galaxy with a stellar mass >109 M o˙, including its high-mass, two-component luminosity profile, color, metallicity gradient, and spread in metallicity. Given the emerging evidence that the central BH occupation fraction of >109 M o˙ galaxies is high, the most plausible interpretation of the kinematic data is that B023-G078 hosts a central BH. This makes it the strongest BH detection in a lower-mass (<107 M o˙) stripped nucleus, and one of the few dynamically detected intermediate-mass BHs.

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Pechetti, R., Seth, A., Kamann, S., Caldwell, N., Strader, J., den Brok, M., et al. (2022). Detection of a 100,000 M-circle dot black hole in M31’s Most Massive Globular Cluster: A Tidally Stripped Nucleus (London : Institute of Physics Publ.). London : Institute of Physics Publ. https://doi.org//10.3847/1538-4357/ac339f
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CC BY 4.0 Unported