Keck Integral-Field Spectroscopy of M87 Reveals an Intrinsically Triaxial Galaxy and a Revised Black Hole Mass
Emily R. Liepold, Chung-Pei Ma, Jonelle L. Walsh

TL;DR
This study uses integral-field spectroscopy to reveal M87's triaxial shape and provides a revised, more accurate mass estimate for its central supermassive black hole, challenging previous assumptions of axisymmetry.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed triaxial modeling of M87, incorporating stellar kinematics and a radially varying mass-to-light ratio, leading to a revised black hole mass estimate.
Findings
M87 is strongly triaxial with specific axis ratios.
Detected a misaligned and twisted velocity field indicating triaxiality.
Revised black hole mass is approximately 5.37 billion solar masses.
Abstract
The three-dimensional intrinsic shape of a galaxy and the mass of the central supermassive black hole provide key insight into the galaxy's growth history over cosmic time. Standard assumptions of a spherical or axisymmetric shape can be simplistic and can bias the black hole mass inferred from the motions of stars within a galaxy. Here we present spatially-resolved stellar kinematics of M87 over a two-dimensional 250\mbox{^{\prime\prime}} \times 300\mbox{^{\prime\prime}} contiguous field covering a radial range of 50 pc-12 kpc from integral-field spectroscopic observations at the Keck II Telescope. From about 5 kpc and outward, we detect a prominent 25 rotational pattern, in which the kinematic axis (connecting the maximal receding and approaching velocities) is misaligned with the photometric major axis of M87. The rotational amplitude and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
