Mass Segregation in NGC 2298: limits on the presence of an Intermediate Mass Black Hole
Mario Pasquato (1), Michele Trenti (2), Guido De Marchi (3), Michael, Gill (4), Douglas P. Hamilton (4), M. Coleman Miller (4), Massimo Stiavelli, (5), Roeland P. van der Marel (5) ((1) U. Pisa, (2) U. Colorado, (3) ESA, (4), U. Maryland, (5) STScI)

TL;DR
This study uses a new method to analyze mass segregation profiles in NGC 2298, finding no evidence of an intermediate mass black hole and demonstrating the method's potential for future research.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel technique to detect central IMBHs in globular clusters by analyzing mass segregation profiles from HST data, validated through N-body simulations.
Findings
Mass segregation profile matches simulations without IMBH
IMBHs more massive than ~300-500 Msun are inconsistent with data
Method proves feasible for future globular cluster studies
Abstract
[abridged] Theoretical investigations have suggested the presence of Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBHs, with masses in the 100-10000 Msun range) in the cores of some Globular Clusters (GCs). In this paper we present the first application of a new technique to determine the presence or absence of a central IMBH in globular clusters that have reached energy equipartition via two-body relaxation. The method is based on the measurement of the radial profile for the average mass of stars in the system, using the fact that a quenching of mass segregation is expected when an IMBH is present. Here we measure the radial profile of mass segregation using main-sequence stars for the globular cluster NGC 2298 from resolved source photometry based on HST-ACS data. The observations are compared to expectations from direct N-body simulations of the dynamics of star clusters with and without an…
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