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Effects of Inclination on Measuring Velocity Dispersion and Implications for Black Holes

Abstract

The relation of central black hole mass and stellar spheroid velocity dispersion (the M-σ\sigma relation) is one of the best-known and tightest correlations linking black holes and their host galaxies. There has been much scrutiny concerning the difficulty of obtaining accurate black hole measurements, and rightly so; however, it has been taken for granted that measurements of velocity dispersion are essentially straightforward. We examine five disk galaxies from cosmological SPH simulations and find that line-of-sight effects due to galaxy orientation can affect the measured σ\sigma by 30%, and consequently black hole mass predictions by up to 1.0 dex. Face-on orientations correspond to systematically lower velocity dispersion measurements, while more edge-on orientations give higher velocity dispersions, due to contamination by disk stars when measuring line of sight quantities. We caution observers that the uncertainty of velocity dispersion measurements is at least 20 km/s, and can be much larger for moderate inclinations. This effect may account for some of the scatter in the locally measured M-σ\sigma relation, particularly at the low-mass end. We provide a method for correcting observed σlos\sigma_{\rm los} values for inclination effects based on observable quantities.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, replaced with accepted versio

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