The Black Hole Mass of NGC 4151 from Stellar Dynamical Modeling
Caroline A. Roberts, Misty C. Bentz, Eugene Vasiliev, Monica Valluri,, and Christopher A. Onken

TL;DR
This study refines the measurement of the supermassive black hole in NGC 4151 using stellar dynamical modeling, highlighting uncertainties and consistency with previous methods, and emphasizing the need for future observations.
Contribution
The paper presents an improved stellar dynamical analysis of NGC 4151's black hole mass, incorporating systematic uncertainty quantification and advanced orbit-superposition modeling.
Findings
Black hole mass range: 0.25 to 3 x 10^7 solar masses
Models with steep cusps suggest no black hole; moderate cusps yield a range
Results align with gas dynamical and reverberation mapping estimates
Abstract
The mass of a supermassive black hole () is a fundamental property that can be obtained through observational methods. Constraining through multiple methods for an individual galaxy is important for verifying the accuracy of different techniques, and for investigating the assumptions inherent in each method. NGC 4151 is one of those rare galaxies for which multiple methods can be used: stellar and gas dynamical modeling because of its proximity ( Mpc from Cepheids), and reverberation mapping because of its active accretion. In this work, we re-analyzed band integral field spectroscopy of the nucleus of NGC 4151 from Gemini NIFS, improving the analysis at several key steps. We then constructed a wide range of axisymmetric dynamical models with the new orbit-superposition code Forstand. One of our primary goals is to quantify the systematic…
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