NGC 3259: A Signal for an Untapped Population of Slowly Accreting Intermediate-Mass Black Holes
Kirill A. Grishin, Igor V. Chilingarian, Francoise Combes, Franz E. Bauer, Victoria A. Toptun, Ivan Yu. Katkov, Daniel Fabricant

TL;DR
This study identifies a low-mass active galactic nucleus in NGC 3259 hosting an intermediate-mass black hole, highlighting a potentially untapped population of slowly accreting black holes detectable by future surveys.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery and detailed analysis of a low-mass AGN in NGC 3259, demonstrating the existence of a population of slowly accreting IMBHs that are challenging to detect with current methods.
Findings
NGC 3259 hosts a black hole of (1.7-4.1)×10^5 solar masses.
The black hole accretes at about 1% of the Eddington limit.
The galaxy is an outlier in the M_BH–M*_sph relation, indicating divergent growth pathways.
Abstract
Low-mass active galactic nuclei (AGNs) can provide important constraints on the formation and evolution of supermassive black holes (SMBHs), a central challenge in modern cosmology. To date only small samples of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs, ) and 'lesser' supermassive black holes (LSMBHs, ) have been identified. Our present study of NGC 3259 at D=27 Mpc with the Binospec integral field unit spectrograph complemented with Keck Echelle Spectrograph and Imager observations demonstrates the need for and the power of the spectroscopic follow-up. NGC 3259 hosts a black hole with a mass of , inferred from multi-epoch spectroscopic data, that accretes at 1% of the Eddington limit as suggested by the analysis of archival XMM-Newton observations. It is the second nearest low-mass AGN after the archetypal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
