On central black holes in ultra-compact dwarf galaxies
Steffen Mieske, Matthias Frank, Holger Baumgardt, Nora Luetzgendorf,, Nadine Neumayer, Michael Hilker

TL;DR
This study investigates whether central black holes can explain the high mass-to-light ratios observed in ultra-compact dwarf galaxies, suggesting many UCDs may be remnants of tidally stripped galaxies with significant black hole masses.
Contribution
It provides evidence that central black holes account for elevated M/L ratios in UCDs, supporting their origin from larger progenitor galaxies.
Findings
Massive UCDs have average Psi=1.7, indicating dark mass presence.
Black holes of 10-15% of UCD mass can explain the elevated M/L ratios.
UCDs are offset from galaxy black hole scaling relations, implying different formation histories.
Abstract
CONTEXT: The dynamical mass-to-light (M/L) ratios of massive ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) are about 50% higher than predicted by stellar population models. AIMS: Here we investigate the possibility that these elevated M/L ratios are caused by a central black hole (BH), heating up the internal motion of stars. We focus on a sample of ~50 extragalactic UCDs for which velocity dispersions and structural parameters have been measured. METHODS: Using up-to-date distance moduli and a consistent treatment of aperture and seeing effects, we calculate the ratio Psi=(M/L)_{dyn}/(M/L)_{pop} between the dynamical and the stellar population M/L of UCDs. For all UCDs with Psi>1 we estimate the mass of a hypothetical central BH needed to reproduce the observed integrated velocity dispersion. RESULTS: Massive UCDs (M>10^7 M_*) have an average Psi = 1.7 +-0.2, implying notable amounts of dark…
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