Active Galactic Nuclei are objects associated with the presence of an accretion disc around supermassive black holes found in the very central region of galaxies with a well-defined bulge. In the optical range of the spectrum, a possible signature of the accretion disc is the presence of a broad double-peaked component that is mostly seen in H α. In this paper, we report the detection of a double-peaked feature in the H α line in the nucleus of the galaxy NGC 4958. The narrow-line region of this object has an emission that is typical of a low-ionization nuclear emission-line region galaxy, which is the usual classification for double-peaked emitters. A central broad component, related to the broad-line region of this object, is seen in H α and also in H β. We concluded that the double-peaked emission is emitted by a circular relativistic Keplerian disc with an inner radius ζi = 570 ± 83, an outer radius ζo = 860 ± 170 (both in units of GMSMBH/c2), an inclination to the line of sight i = 27.2 ± 0.7° and a local broadening parameter σ = 1310 ± 70 km s-1
CITATION STYLE
Ricci, T. V., & Steiner, J. E. (2019). Detection of a double-peaked H α component from the accretion disc of NGC 4958. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 486(1), 1138–1145. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz919
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