The supermassive black hole and double nucleus of the core elliptical NGC5419
X. Mazzalay (1), J. Thomas (1,2), R. P. Saglia (1,2), G. A. Wegner, (3), R. Bender (1,2), P. Erwin (1), M. H. Fabricius (1,2,4), S. Rusli (1,2), ((1) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany,, (2) Universit\"atssternwarte, M\"unchen, Germany

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution observations to analyze the central structure of NGC5419, revealing a potential binary supermassive black hole system and measuring the galaxy's black hole mass through dynamical modeling.
Contribution
First detailed dynamical analysis of NGC5419's core revealing a possible binary black hole system and precise black hole mass measurement.
Findings
Detection of a double nucleus separated by ~70 pc.
Black hole mass estimated at approximately 7.2 billion solar masses.
Velocity dispersion peaks at the double nucleus region.
Abstract
We obtained adaptive-optics assisted SINFONI observations of the central regions of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC5419 with a spatial resolution of 0.2 arcsec ( pc). NGC5419 has a large depleted stellar core with a radius of 1.58 arcsec (430 pc). HST and SINFONI images show a point source located at the galaxy's photocentre, which is likely associated with the low-luminosity AGN previously detected in NGC5419. Both the HST and SINFONI images also show a second nucleus, off-centred by 0.25 arcsec ( pc). Outside of the central double nucleus, we measure an almost constant velocity dispersion of km/s. In the region where the double nucleus is located, the dispersion rises steeply to a peak value of km/s. In addition to the SINFONI data, we also obtained stellar kinematics at larger radii from the South African Large Telescope. While…
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