The Black Hole in the Compact, High-dispersion Galaxy NGC 1271
Jonelle L. Walsh (1,2), Remco C. E. van den Bosch (3), Karl Gebhardt, (2), Ak{\i}n Y{\i}ld{\i}r{\i}m (3), Kayhan G\"ultekin (4), Bernd Husemann, (5,6), Douglas O. Richstone (4) ((1) Texas A&M University, (2) The University, of Texas at Austin

TL;DR
This study measures the supermassive black hole in the compact galaxy NGC 1271, revealing a mass larger than expected from luminosity but consistent with velocity dispersion, highlighting differences in black hole scaling relations.
Contribution
First detailed black hole mass measurement in a compact, high-dispersion galaxy using advanced integral field spectroscopy and dynamical modeling.
Findings
Black hole mass is (3.0^{+1.0}_{-1.1}) x 10^9 M_sun.
Black hole mass exceeds predictions based on bulge luminosity.
Black hole mass aligns with predictions from stellar velocity dispersion.
Abstract
Located in the Perseus cluster, NGC 1271 is an early-type galaxy with a small effective radius of 2.2 kpc and a large stellar velocity dispersion of 276 km/s for its K-band luminosity of 8.9x10^{10} L_sun. We present a mass measurement for the black hole in this compact, high-dispersion galaxy using observations from the integral field spectrograph NIFS on the Gemini North telescope assisted by laser guide star adaptive optics, large-scale integral field unit observations with PPAK at the Calar Alto Observatory, and Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 imaging observations. We are able to map out the stellar kinematics on small spatial scales, within the black hole sphere of influence, and on large scales that extend out to four times the galaxy's effective radius. We find that the galaxy is rapidly rotating and exhibits a sharp rise in the velocity dispersion. Through the use of orbit-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
