# A close look at the dwarf AGN of NGC 4395: optical and near-IR integral   field spectroscopy

**Authors:** Carine Brum, Marlon R. Diniz, Rogemar A. Riffel, Alberto, Rodriguez-Ardila, Luis Ho, Rogerio Riffel, Rachel Mason, Lucimara Martins,, Andreea Petric, Ruben Sanchez-Janssen

arXiv: 1903.08083 · 2019-04-10

## TL;DR

This study uses optical and near-infrared integral field spectroscopy to analyze the nucleus of the dwarf galaxy NGC 4395, revealing details about its gas dynamics, black hole mass, and potential gas accretion processes.

## Contribution

It provides detailed spatially-resolved measurements of gas kinematics, black hole mass, and gas distribution in a nearby dwarf galaxy with an active nucleus, using new integral field spectroscopy data.

## Key findings

- Detected a rotating gas disk with 25 km/s velocity amplitude.
- Estimated black hole mass as approximately 2.5 x 10^5 solar masses.
- Identified an elongated gas structure possibly due to satellite accretion or cosmic cloud infall.

## Abstract

Intermediate mass black holes (10$^3$-10$^5$ M$_\odot$) in the center of dwarf galaxies are believed to be analogous to growing Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in the early Universe. Their characterization can provide insight about the early galaxies. We present optical and near-infrared integral field spectroscopy of the inner $\sim$50 pc of the dwarf galaxy NGC4395, known to harbor an AGN. NGC 4395 is an ideal candidate to investigate the nature of dwarf AGN, as it is nearby ($d\approx4.4$ Mpc) enough to allow a close look at its nucleus. The optical data were obtained with the Gemini GMOS-IFU covering the 4500 A to 7300 A spectral range at a spatial resolution of 10 pc. The J and K-band spectra were obtained with the Gemini NIFS at spatial resolutions of $\sim$5 pc. The gas kinematics show a compact, rotation disk component with a projected velocity amplitude of 25 km s$^{-1}$. We estimate a mass of $7.7\times10^5$ M$_\odot$ inside a radius of 10 pc. From the H$\alpha$ broad line component, we estimate the AGN bolometric luminosity as $L_{ bol}=(9.9\pm1.4)\times10^{40}$ erg s$^{-1}$ and a mass $M_{ BH}=(2.5^{+1.0}_{-0.8})\times10^5$ M$_\odot$ for the central black hole. The mean surface mass densities for the ionized and molecular gas are in the ranges (1-2) M$_{\odot} $pc$^{-2}$ and (1-4)$\times10^{-3}$ M${_\odot}$ pc$^{-2}$ and the average ratio between ionized and hot molecular gas masses is $\sim$500. The emission-line flux distributions reveal an elongated structure at 24 pc west of the nucleus, which is blueshifted relative to the systemic velocity of the galaxy by $\approx$30 km s$^{-1}$. We speculate that this structure is originated by the accretion of a gas-rich small satellite or by a low metallicity cosmic cloud.

## Full text

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## Figures

22 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.08083/full.md

## References

124 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.08083/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.08083