The Black Hole Mass and Photometric Components of NGC 4826
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Date
2024-10
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Citation of Original Publication
Gültekin, Kayhan, Karl Gebhardt, John Kormendy, Adi Foord, Ralf Bender, Tod R. Lauer, Jason Pinkney, Douglas O. Richstone, and Scott Tremaine. “The Black Hole Mass and Photometric Components of NGC 4826.” The Astrophysical Journal 974, no. 1 (October 2024): 16. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad67dc.
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This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
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Abstract
We present infrared photometry and Hubble Space Telescope imaging and spectroscopy of the Sab galaxy NGC 4826. Schwarzschild dynamical modeling is used to measure its central black hole mass M. Photometric decomposition is used to enable a comparison of M to published scaling relations between black hole masses and properties of host bulges. This decomposition implies that NGC 4826 contains classical and pseudobulges of approximately equal mass. The classical bulge has best-fit Sérsic index n = 3.27. The pseudobulge is made up of three parts, an inner lens (n = 0.18 at r ≲ 4''), an outer lens (n = 0.17 at r ≲ 45''), and a n = 0.58 Sérsic component required to match the surface brightness between the lens components. The total V-band luminosity of the galaxy is Mᵥₜ = -21.07, the ratio of classical bulge to total light is B/T ≃ 0.12, and the ratio of pseudobulge to total light is PB/T ≃ 0.13. The outer disk is exponential (n = 1.07) and makes up D/T = 0.75 of the light of the galaxy. Our best-fit Schwarzschild model has a black hole mass with 1σ uncertainties of M = 8.4⁺¹.⁷₋₀.₆ X 10⁶ M☉ and a stellar population with a K-band mass-to-light ratio of ϒₖ = 0.46 ± 0.03 M☉ L☉⁻¹ at the assumed distance of 7.27 Mpc. Our modeling is marginally consistent with M = 0 at the 3σ limit. These best-fit parameters were calculated assuming the black hole is located where the velocity dispersion is largest; this is offset from the maximum surface brightness, probably because of dust absorption. The black hole mass—one of the smallest measured by modeling stellar dynamics—satisfies the well known correlations of M with the K-band luminosity, stellar mass, and velocity dispersion of the classical bulge only. In contrast, the black hole is undermassive with respect to the correlation of M with total (classical plus pseudo) bulge luminosity. Thus the composite (classical bulge plus pseudobulge) galaxy NGC 4826 is consistent with previous results on black hole scaling relations and helps to strengthen these results at low black hole masses.