Abstract
We examine the internal properties of the most massive ultracompact dwarf galaxy (UCD), M59-UCD3, by combining adaptive-optics-assisted near-IR integral field spectroscopy from Gemini/NIFS and Hubble Space Telescope ( HST ) imaging. We use the multiband HST imaging to create a mass model that suggests and accounts for the presence of multiple stellar populations and structural components. We combine these mass models with kinematics measurements from Gemini/NIFS to find a best-fit stellar mass-to-light ratio ( M / L ) and black hole (BH) mass using Jeans anisotropic models (JAMs), axisymmetric Schwarzschild models, and triaxial Schwarzschild models. The best-fit parameters in the JAM and axisymmetric Schwarzschild models have BHs between 2.5 and 5.9 million solar masses. The triaxial Schwarzschild models point toward a similar BH mass but show a minimum χ 2 at a BH mass of ∼0. Models with a BH in all three techniques provide better fits to the central V rms profiles, and thus we estimate the BH mass to be 4.2 − 1.7 + 2.1 × 10 6 M ⊙ (estimated 1 σ uncertainties). We also present deep radio imaging of M59-UCD3 and two other UCDs in Virgo with dynamical BH mass measurements, and we compare these to X-ray measurements to check for consistency with the fundamental plane of BH accretion. We detect faint radio emission in M59cO but find only upper limits for M60-UCD1 and M59-UCD3 despite X-ray detections in both these sources. The BH mass and nuclear light profile of M59-UCD3 suggest that it is the tidally stripped remnant of a ∼10 9 –10 10 M ⊙ galaxy.
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CITATION STYLE
Ahn, C. P., Seth, A. C., Cappellari, M., Krajnović, D., Strader, J., Voggel, K. T., … Spitler, L. (2018). The Black Hole in the Most Massive Ultracompact Dwarf Galaxy M59-UCD3. The Astrophysical Journal, 858(2), 102. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aabc57
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