Evidence for a 3 x 10^8 solar mass black hole in NGC 7052 from HST observations of the nuclear gas disk
R. P. van der Marel (STScI, Baltimore), F. C. van den Bosch (Univ. of, Washington)

TL;DR
This study uses HST observations of NGC 7052's nuclear gas disk to provide strong evidence for a supermassive black hole of approximately 3.3 x 10^8 solar masses, highlighting the effectiveness of gas kinematics in black hole detection.
Contribution
First direct measurement of a supermassive black hole in NGC 7052 using nuclear gas disk kinematics from HST data.
Findings
Black hole mass estimated at ~3.3 x 10^8 solar masses.
Models without a black hole are inconsistent with observed gas velocities.
Black hole mass varies significantly among galaxies with similar luminosities.
Abstract
We present an HST study of the nuclear region of the E4 radio galaxy NGC 7052, which has a nuclear disk of dust and gas. The WFPC2 was used to obtain B, V and I broad-band images and an H_alpha+[NII] narrow-band image. The FOS was used to obtain H_alpha+[NII] spectra along the major axis, using a 0.26 arcsec diameter circular aperture. The observed rotation velocity of the ionized gas is V = 155 +/- 17 km/s at r = 0.2 arcsec from the nucleus. The Gaussian dispersion of the emission lines increases from sigma = 70 km/s at r=1 arcsec, to sigma = 400 km/s on the nucleus. To interpret the gas kinematics we construct axisymmetric models in which the gas and dust reside in a disk in the equatorial plane of the stellar body. It is assumed that the gas moves on circular orbits, with an intrinsic velocity dispersion due to turbulence. The circular velocity is calculated from the combined…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
