42 research outputs found
The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey - Infrared (NGVS-IR): I. A new Near-UV/Optical/Near-IR Globular Cluster selection tool
The NGVS-IR project (Next Generation Virgo Survey - Infrared) is a contiguous
near-infrared imaging survey of the Virgo cluster of galaxies. It complements
the optical wide-field survey of Virgo (NGVS). The current state of NGVS-IR
consists of Ks-band imaging of 4 deg^2 centered on M87, and J and Ks-band
imaging of 16 deg^2 covering the region between M49 and M87. In this paper, we
present the observations of the central 4 deg^2 centered on Virgo's core
region. The data were acquired with WIRCam on the Canada-France-Hawaii
Telescope and the total integration time was 41 hours distributed in 34
contiguous tiles. A survey-specific strategy was designed to account for
extended galaxies while still measuring accurate sky brightness within the
survey area. The average 5\sigma limiting magnitude is Ks=24.4 AB mag and the
50% completeness limit is Ks=23.75 AB mag for point source detections, when
using only images with better than 0.7" seeing (median seeing 0.54"). Star
clusters are marginally resolved in these image stacks, and Virgo galaxies with
\mu_Ks=24.4 AB mag arcsec^-2 are detected. Combining the Ks data with optical
and ultraviolet data, we build the uiK color-color diagram which allows a very
clean color-based selection of globular clusters in Virgo. This diagnostic plot
will provide reliable globular cluster candidates for spectroscopic follow-up
campaigns needed to continue the exploration of Virgo's photometric and
kinematic sub-structures, and will help the design of future searches for
globular clusters in extragalactic systems. Equipped with this powerful new
tool, future NGVS-IR investigations based on the uiK diagram will address the
mapping and analysis of extended structures and compact stellar systems in and
around Virgo galaxies.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Does the intermediate-mass black hole in LEDA 87300 (RGG 118) follow the near-quadratic Mbh-Mspheroid relation?
The mass scaling relation between supermassive black holes and their host spheroids has previously been described by a quadratic or steeper relation at low masses (105 < Mbh/Mo âČ 107). How this extends into the realm of intermediate-mass black holes (102 < Mbh/Mo < 105) is not yet clear, although for the barred Sm galaxy LEDA 87300, Baldassare et al. recently reported a nominal virial mass of Mbh = 5 104 Mo residing in a "spheroid" of stellar mass equal to 6.3 108 Mo. We point out, for the first time, that LEDA 87300 therefore appears to reside on the near-quadratic Mbh-Msph,â relation. However, Baldassare et al. modeled the bulge and bar as the single spheroidal component of this galaxy. Here we perform a 3-component bulge+bar+disk decomposition and find a bulge luminosity which is 7.7 times fainter than the published "bulge" luminosity. After correcting for dust, we find that Mbulge = 0.9 108 Mo and Mbulge/Mdisk = 0.04 - which is now in accord with ratios typically found in Scd-Sm galaxies. We go on to discuss slight revisions to the stellar velocity dispersion (40 11 km s-1) and black hole mass () and show that LEDA 87300 remains consistent with the Mbh-Ï relation, and also the near-quadratic Mbh-Msph,â relation when using the reduced bulge mass. LEDA 87300 therefore offers the first support for the rapid but regulated (near-quadratic) growth of black holes, relative to their host bulge/spheroid, extending into the domain of intermediate-mass black holes
How does a low-mass cut-off in the stellar IMF affect the evolution of young star clusters?
We investigate how different stellar initial mass functions (IMFs) can affect the mass-loss and survival of star clusters. We find that IMFs with radically different low-mass cut-offs (between 0.1 and 2âMâ) do not change cluster destruction time-scales as much as might be expected. Unsurprisingly, we find that clusters with more high-mass stars lose relatively more mass through stellar evolution, but the response to this mass-loss is to expand and hence significantly slow their dynamical evolution. We also argue that it is very difficult, if not impossible, to have clusters with different IMFs that are initially âthe sameâ, since the mass, radius and relaxation times depend on each other and on the IMF in a complex way. We conclude that changing the IMF to be biased towards more massive stars does speed up mass-loss and dissolution, but that it is not as dramatic as might be thought
HUNTING FOR SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES IN NEARBY GALAXIES WITH THE HOBBYâEBERLY TELESCOPE
We have conducted an optical long-slit spectroscopic survey of 1022 galaxies
using the 10m Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) at McDonald Observatory. The main
goal of the HET Massive Galaxy Survey (HETMGS) is to find nearby galaxies that
are suitable for black hole mass measurements. In order to measure accurately
the black hole mass, one should kinematically resolve the region where the
black hole dominates the gravitational potential. For most galaxies, this
region is much less than an arcsecond. Thus, black hole masses are best
measured in nearby galaxies with telescopes that obtain high-spatial
resolution. The HETMGS focuses on those galaxies predicted to have the largest
sphere-of-influence, based on published stellar velocity dispersions or the
galaxy fundamental plane. To ensure coverage over galaxy types, the survey
targets those galaxies across a face-on projection of the fundamental plane. We
present the sample selection and resulting data products from the long-slit
observations, including central stellar kinematics and emission line ratios.
The full dataset, including spectra and resolved kinematics, is available
online. Additionally, we show that the current crop of black hole masses are
highly biased towards dense galaxies and that especially large disks and low
dispersion galaxies are under-represented. This survey provides the necessary
groundwork for future systematic black hole mass measurement campaigns.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures and a 17 page data table, ApJs accepted. Survey
data files at http://mpia.de/~bosch/hetmg
Galaxy bulges and their massive black holes: a review
With references to both key and oft-forgotten pioneering works, this article
starts by presenting a review into how we came to believe in the existence of
massive black holes at the centres of galaxies. It then presents the historical
development of the near-linear (black hole)-(host spheroid) mass relation,
before explaining why this has recently been dramatically revised. Past
disagreement over the slope of the (black hole)-(velocity dispersion) relation
is also explained, and the discovery of sub-structure within the (black
hole)-(velocity dispersion) diagram is discussed. As the search for the
fundamental connection between massive black holes and their host galaxies
continues, the competing array of additional black hole mass scaling relations
for samples of predominantly inactive galaxies are presented.Comment: Invited (15 Feb. 2014) review article (submitted 16 Nov. 2014). 590
references, 9 figures, 25 pages in emulateApJ format. To appear in "Galactic
Bulges", E. Laurikainen, R.F. Peletier, and D.A. Gadotti (eds.), Springer
Publishin
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Megamaser Disks Reveal a Broad Distribution of Black Hole Mass in Spiral Galaxies
We use new precision measurements of black hole (BH) masses from water megamaser disks to investigate scaling relations between macroscopic galaxy properties and supermassive BH mass. The megamaser-derived BH masses span 10(6)-10(8) M-circle dot, while all the galaxy properties that we examine (including total stellar mass, central mass density, and central velocity dispersion) lie within a narrower range. Thus, no galaxy property correlates tightly with M-BH in similar to L* spiral galaxies as traced by megamaser disks. 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 appear to 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 an inability to resolve their spheres of influence and/or megamasers may preferentially occur in lower-mass BHs.</p