The halos of elliptical galaxies are faint and difficult to explore, but they
contain vital clues to both structure and formation. We present the results of
an imaging and spectroscopic survey for planetary nebulae (PNe) in the nearby
elliptical NGC 5128. We extend the work of Hui et al.(1995) well into the halo
of the galaxy--out to distances of 100 and 50 kpc along the major and minor
axes. We now know of 1141 PNe in NGC 5128, 780 of which are confirmed. Of these
780 PNe, 349 are new from this survey, and 148 are at radii beyond 20 kpc. PNe
exist at distances up to 80 kpc (~15 r_e), showing that the stellar halo
extends to the limit of our data. This study represents by far the largest
kinematic study of an elliptical galaxy to date, both in the number of velocity
tracers and in radial extent. We confirm the large rotation of the PNe along
the major axis, and show that it extends in a disk-like feature into the halo.
The rotation curve of the stars flattens at ~100 km/s with V/sigma between 1
and 1.5, and with the velocity dispersion of the PNe falling gradually at
larger radii. The two-dimensional velocity field exhibits a zero-velocity
contour with a pronounced twist, showing that the galaxy potential is likely
triaxial in shape, tending toward prolate. The total dynamical mass of the
galaxy within 80 kpc is ~5 x 10^{11} M_sun, with M/L_B ~ 13. This mass-to-light
ratio is much lower than what is typically expected for elliptical galaxies.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures (figures 3-8 best viewed in color), accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journa