The impact of stripped Nuclei on the Super-Massive Black Hole number density in the local Universe
Karina T. Voggel, Anil C. Seth, Holger Baumgardt, Steffen Mieske, Joel, Pfeffer, Alexander Rasskazov

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to estimate the number of super-massive black holes in stripped galaxy nuclei, revealing their significant contribution to the local SMBH density and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
The study presents a novel empirical approach to identify UCDs hosting SMBHs and quantifies their abundance in galaxy clusters, advancing understanding of SMBH distribution in the universe.
Findings
Approximately 69 stripped nuclei with SMBHs in the Fornax and Virgo clusters.
Stripped nuclei with SMBHs constitute 10-40% of the local SMBH density.
Numerous SMBHs in stripped nuclei impact event rate predictions for cosmic phenomena.
Abstract
The recent discovery of super-massive black holes (SMBHs) in the centers of high-mass ultra compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) suggests that at least some UCDs are the stripped nuclear star clusters of lower mass galaxies. Tracing these former nuclei of stripped galaxies provides a unique way to track the assembly history of a galaxy or galaxy cluster. In this paper we present a new method to estimate how many UCDs host an SMBH in their center and thus are stripped galaxy nuclei. We revisit the dynamical mass measurements that suggest many UCDs have more mass than expected from stellar population estimates, which recent observations have shown is due to the presence of an SMBH. We revise the stellar population mass estimates using a new empirical relation between the mass-to-light ratio (M/L) and metallicity, and use this to predict which UCDs are most likely to host an SMBH. This enables us…
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