Accessing Intermediate-Mass Black Holes in 728 Globular Star Clusters in NGC\,4472
J. M. Wrobel, T. J. Maccarone, J. C. A. Miller-Jones, K. E. Nyland

TL;DR
This study simulates next-generation radio observations of 728 globular clusters in NGC 4472 to detect intermediate-mass black holes, providing benchmarks for their masses and exploring formation scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation framework for detecting IMBHs in globular clusters using ngVLA, benchmarking detection thresholds across different models and scenarios.
Findings
Access to IMBH analogs in all clusters via radio detection.
Empirical fundamental-plane relation estimates IMBH masses around 50-4000 solar masses.
Bondi accretion model suggests IMBH masses around 3-100 million solar masses.
Abstract
Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) by definition have masses of , a range with few observational constraints. Finding IMBHs in globular star clusters (GCs) would validate a formation channel for massive black-hole seeds in the early universe. Here, we simulate a 60-hour observation with the next-generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) of 728 GC candidates in the Virgo Cluster galaxy NGC\,4472. Interpreting the radio detection thresholds as signatures of accretion onto IMBHs, we benchmark IMBH mass thresholds in three scenarios and find the following: (1) Radio analogs of ESO\,243-49 HLX-1, a strong IMBH candidate with in a star cluster, are easy to access in all 728 GC candidates. (2) For the 30 GC candidates with extant X-ray detections, the empirical fundamental-plane relation involving black hole mass…
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