A Stacked Search for Intermediate-Mass Black Holes in 337 Extragalactic Star Clusters
J. M. Wrobel, K. E. Nyland, and J. C. A. Miller-Jones

TL;DR
This study conducted a radio search for intermediate-mass black holes in 337 star clusters in NGC 1023, finding no detections and setting upper limits on black hole masses, thus constraining their prevalence and properties.
Contribution
First radio search for IMBHs in extragalactic star clusters using VLA data, providing upper limits on black hole masses and informing theories of IMBH occurrence.
Findings
No individual cluster detections of IMBHs.
Stacked data set upper limit: M_BH < 2.3 x 10^5 M_sun.
Black hole mass fraction M_BH/M_star < 0.05-0.29.
Abstract
Forbes et al. recently used the Hubble Space Telescope to localize hundreds of candidate star clusters in NGC 1023, an early-type galaxy at a distance of 11.1 Mpc. Old stars dominate the light of 92% of the clusters and intermediate-age stars dominate the light of the remaining 8%. Theory predicts that clusters with such ages can host intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) with masses M_BH \lesssim 10^5 M_sun. To investigate this prediction, we used 264 s of 5.5 GHz data from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) to search for the radiative signatures of IMBH accretion from 337 candidate clusters in an image spanning 492 arcsec (26 kpc) with a resolution of 0.40 arcsec (22 pc). None of the individual clusters are detected, nor are weighted-mean image stacks of the 311 old clusters, the 26 intermediate-age clusters, and the 20 clusters with stellar masses M_star \gtrsim 7.5 x 10^5…
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