Central kinematics of the globular cluster NGC 2808: Upper limit on the mass of an intermediate-mass black hole
Nora L\"utzgendorf, Markus Kissler-Patig, Karl Gebhardt, Holger, Baumgardt, Eva Noyola, Behrang Jalali, P. Tim de Zeeuw, Nadine Neumayer

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy and photometry to analyze the core dynamics of globular cluster NGC 2808, setting an upper limit on the possible mass of an intermediate-mass black hole at its center.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic analysis of NGC 2808 combining multiple data sources to constrain the presence of an intermediate-mass black hole.
Findings
No evidence for a central black hole was found.
An upper limit of 10^4 solar masses was set for a potential black hole.
The cluster's mass-to-light ratio was measured as 2.1 ± 0.2.
Abstract
Globular clusters are an excellent laboratory for stellar population and dynamical research. Recent studies have shown that these stellar systems are not as simple as previously assumed. With multiple stellar populations as well as outer rotation and mass segregation they turn out to exhibit high complexity. This includes intermediate-mass black holes which are proposed to sit at the centers of some massive globular clusters. Today's high angular resolution ground based spectrographs allow velocity-dispersion measurements at a spatial resolution comparable to the radius of influence for plausible IMBH masses, and to detect changes in the inner velocity-dispersion profile. Together with high quality photometric data from HST, it is possible to constrain black-hole masses by their kinematic signatures. We determine the central velocity-dispersion profile of the globular cluster NGC 2808…
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