A remarkably large depleted core in the Abell 2029 BCG IC 1101
Bililign T. Dullo, Alister W. Graham, Johan H. Knapen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an exceptionally large depleted core in the brightest cluster galaxy IC 1101, suggesting a history of numerous mergers and the influence of overmassive black hole binaries.
Contribution
It presents the largest core size measured in any galaxy to date and links this to an extraordinary number of past major mergers and black hole activity.
Findings
Largest core size (R_b ~ 4.2 kpc) in any galaxy.
High mass deficit (~4.9 x 10^11 M_sun) indicating extensive black hole scouring.
Excessively high M_def/M_BH ratio implying multiple major mergers.
Abstract
We report the discovery of an extremely large (R_b ~ 2"77 ~ 4.2 kpc) core in the brightest cluster galaxy, IC 1101, of the rich galaxy cluster Abell 2029. Luminous core-S\'ersic galaxies contain depleted cores---with sizes (R_b) typically 20 - 500 pc---that are thought to be formed by coalescing black hole binaries. We fit a (double nucleus) + (spheroid) + (intermediate-scale component) + (stellar halo) model to the HST surface brightness profile of IC 1101, finding the largest core size measured in any galaxy to date. This core is an order of magnitude larger than those typically measured for core-S\'ersic galaxies. We find that the spheroid's V-band absolute magnitude (M_V) of -23.8 mag (~ 25% of the total galaxy light, i.e., including the stellar halo) is faint for the large R_b, such that the observed core is 1.02 dex ~ 3.4 sigma_s (rms scatter) larger than that estimated from the…
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