43 research outputs found
Mrk 1419 - a new distance determination
Water vapor megamasers from the center of active galaxies provide a powerful
tool to trace accretion disks at sub-parsec resolution and, through an entirely
geometrical method, measure direct distances to galaxies up to 200 Mpc. The
Megamaser Cosmology Project (MCP) is formed by a team of astronomers with the
aim of identifying new maser systems, and mapping their emission at high
angular resolution to determine their distance. Two types of observations are
necessary to measure a distance: single-dish monitoring to measure the
acceleration of gas in the disk, and sensitive VLBI imaging to measure the
angular size of the disk, measure the rotation curve, and model radial
displacement of the maser feature. The ultimate goal of the MCP is to make a
precise measurement of H0 by measuring such distances to at least 10 maser
galaxies in the Hubble flow. We present here the preliminary results from a new
maser system, Mrk 1419. Through a model of the rotation from the systemic
masers assuming a narrow ring, and combining these results with the
acceleration measurement from the Green Bank Telescope, we determine a distance
to Mrk 1419 of 81\pm10 Mpc. Given that the disk shows a significant warp that
may not be entirely traced by our current observations, more sensitive
observations and more sophisticated disk modeling will be essential to improve
our distance estimation to this galaxy.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 287
"Cosmic Masers- from OH to Ho", in Stellenbosch, S
Towards Precision Supermassive Black Hole Masses using Megamaser Disks
Megamaser disks provide the most precise and accurate extragalactic
supermassive black hole masses. Here we describe a search for megamasers in
nearby galaxies using the Green Bank Telescope (GBT). We focus on galaxies
where we believe that we can resolve the gravitational sphere of influence of
the black hole and derive a stellar or gas dynamical measurement with optical
or NIR observations. Since there are only a handful of super massive black
holes (SMBH) that have direct black hole mass measurements from more than one
method, even a single galaxy with a megamaser disk and a stellar dynamical
black hole mass would provide necessary checks on the stellar dynamical
methods. We targeted 87 objects from the Hobby-Eberly Telescope Massive Galaxy
Survey, and detected no new maser disks. Most of the targeted objects are
elliptical galaxies with typical stellar velocity dispersions of 250 km/s and
distances within 130 Mpc. We discuss the implications of our non-detections,
whether they imply a threshold X-ray luminosity required for masing, or
possibly reflect the difficulty of maintaining a masing disk around much more
massive (>10^8 Msun) black holes at low Eddington ratio. Given the power of
maser disks at probing black hole accretion and demographics, we suggest that
future maser searches should endeavour to remove remaining sample biases, in
order to sort out the importance of these covariant effects.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, Apj, updated to match the accepted versio
The Megamaser Cosmology Project. VII. Investigating disk physics using spectral monitoring observations
We use single-dish radio spectra of known 22 GHz HO megamasers, primarily
gathered from the large dataset observed by the Megamaser Cosmology Project, to
identify Keplerian accretion disks and to investigate several aspects of the
disk physics. We test a mechanism for maser excitation proposed by Maoz & McKee
(1998), whereby population inversion arises in gas behind spiral shocks
traveling through the disk. Though the flux of redshifted features is larger on
average than that of blueshifted features, in support of the model, the
high-velocity features show none of the predicted systematic velocity drifts.
We find rapid intra-day variability in the maser spectrum of ESO 558-G009 that
is likely the result of interstellar scintillation, for which we favor a nearby
( pc) scattering screen. In a search for reverberation in six
well-sampled sources, we find that any radially-propagating signal must be
contributing 10% of the total variability. We also set limits on the
magnetic field strengths in seven sources, using strong flaring events to check
for the presence of Zeeman splitting. These limits are typically 200--300 mG
(), but our most stringent limits reach down to 73 mG for the galaxy
NGC 1194.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Refining the M_BH-V_c scaling relation with HI rotation curves of water megamaser galaxies
Black hole - galaxy scaling relations provide information about the
coevolution of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies. We compare the
black hole mass - circular velocity (MBH - Vc) relation with the black hole
mass - bulge stellar velocity dispersion (MBH - sigma) relation, to see whether
the scaling relations can passively emerge from a large number of mergers, or
require a physical mechanism, such as feedback from an active nucleus. We
present VLA H I observations of five galaxies, including three water megamaser
galaxies, to measure the circular velocity. Using twenty-two galaxies with
dynamical MBH measurements and Vc measurements extending to large radius, our
best-fit MBH - Vc relation, log MBH = alpha + beta log(Vc /200 km s^-1), yields
alpha = 7.43+/-0.13, beta = 3.68+1.23/-1.20, and intrinsic scatter epsilon_int
= 0.51+0.11/-0.09. The intrinsic scatter may well be higher than 0.51, as we
take great care to ascribe conservatively large observational errors. We find
comparable scatter in the MBH - sigma relations, epsilon_int = 0.48+0.10/-0.08,
while pure merging scenarios would likely result in a tighter scaling with the
dark halo (as traced by Vc) than baryonic (sigma) properties. Instead, feedback
from the active nucleus may act on bulge scales to tighten the MBH - sigma
relation with respect to the MBH - Vc relation, as observed.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures, ApJ accepte
Circumnuclear Structures in Megamaser Host Galaxies
Using HST, we identify circumnuclear (- pc scale) structures in
nine new HO megamaser host galaxies to understand the flow of matter from
kpc-scale galactic structures down to the supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at
galactic centers. We double the sample analyzed in a similar way by Greene et
al. (2013) and consider the properties of the combined sample of 18 sources. We
find that disk-like structure is virtually ubiquitous when we can resolve
pc scales, in support of the notion that non-axisymmetries on these
scales are a necessary condition for SMBH fueling. We perform an analysis of
the orientation of our identified nuclear regions and compare it with the
orientation of megamaser disks and the kpc-scale disks of the hosts. We find
marginal evidence that the disk-like nuclear structures show increasing
misalignment from the kpc-scale host galaxy disk as the scale of the structure
decreases. In turn, we find that the orientation of both the pc scale
nuclear structures and their host galaxy large-scale disks is consistent with
random with respect to the orientation of their respective megamaser disks.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, 4 tables; Resubmitted to ApJ after referee's
comment
Megamaser Disks Reveal a Broad Distribution of Black Hole Mass in Spiral Galaxies
We use new precision measurements of black hole masses from water megamaser
disks to investigate scaling relations between macroscopic galaxy properties
and supermassive black hole (BH) mass. The megamaser-derived BH masses span
10^6-10^8 M_sun, while all the galaxy properties that we examine (including
stellar mass, central mass density, central velocity dispersion) lie within a
narrow range. Thus, no galaxy property correlates tightly with M_BH in ~L*
spiral galaxies. Of them all, stellar velocity dispersion provides the tightest
relation, but at fixed sigma* the mean megamaser M_BH are offset by -0.6+/-0.1
dex relative to early-type galaxies. Spiral galaxies with non-maser dynamical
BH masses do not show this offset. At low mass, we do not yet know the full
distribution of BH mass at fixed galaxy property; the non-maser dynamical
measurements may miss the low-mass end of the BH distribution due to inability
to resolve the spheres of influence and/or megamasers may preferentially occur
in lower-mass BHs.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, replaced to fix error: NGC 4594 is not a maser
galax