A Quintet of Black Hole Mass Determinations
Kayhan Gultekin (1), Douglas O. Richstone (1), Karl Gebhardt (2), Tod, R. Lauer (3), Jason Pinkney (4), M. C. Aller (5), Ralf Bender (6), Alan, Dressler (7), S. M. Faber (8), Alexei V. Filippenko (9), Richard Green (10),, Luis C. Ho (7), John Kormendy (2)

TL;DR
This paper presents five new black hole mass measurements in different galaxies using Hubble Space Telescope data and advanced kinematic modeling, providing insights into galaxy properties and black hole scaling relations.
Contribution
It introduces new black hole mass measurements for five galaxies using axisymmetric Schwarzschild models, expanding the sample for testing galaxy-black hole correlations.
Findings
Masses significantly above zero for four galaxies.
One galaxy's mass below predictions, possibly due to structural complexities.
Results support the M-sigma relation for most cases.
Abstract
We report five new measurements of central black hole masses based on STIS and WFPC2 observations with the Hubble Space Telescope and on axisymmetric, three-integral, Schwarzschild orbit-library kinematic models. We selected a sample of galaxies within a narrow range in velocity dispersion that cover a range of galaxy parameters (including Hubble type and core/power-law surface density profile) where we expected to be able to resolve the galaxy's sphere of influence based on the predicted value of the black hole mass from the M-sigma relation. We find masses in units of 10^8 solar masses for the following galaxies: NGC 3585, M_BH = 3.4 (+1.5, -0.6); NGC 3607, M_BH = 1.2 (+0.4, -0.4); NGC 4026, M_BH = 2.1 (+0.7, -0.4); and NGC 5576, M_BH = 1.8 (+0.3, -0.4), all significantly excluding M_BH = 0. For NGC 3945, M_BH = 0.09 (+0.17, -0.21), which is significantly below predictions…
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