Determination of masses of the central black holes in NGC 524 and 2549 using laser guide star adaptive optics

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 399:4 (2009) 1839-1857

Authors:

D Krajnović, RM McDermid, M Cappellari, RL Davies

Abstract:

We present observations of early-type galaxies NGC 524 and 2549 with laser guide star adaptive optics (LGS AO) obtained at GEMINI North telescope using the Near-infrared Integral Field Spectrograph (NIFS) integral field unit (IFU) in the K band. The purpose of these observations is to determine high spatial resolution stellar kinematics within the nuclei of these galaxies and, in combination with previously obtained large-scale observations with the SAURON IFU, to determine the masses (M•) of the supermassive black holes (SMBH). The targeted galaxies were chosen to have central light profiles showing a core (NGC 524) and a cusp (NGC 2549), to probe the feasibility of using the galaxy centre as the natural guide source required for LGS AO. We employ an innovative technique where the focus compensation due to the changing distance to the sodium layer is made 'open loop', allowing the extended galaxy nucleus to be used only for tip-tilt correction. The data have spatial resolution of 0.23 and 0.17 arcsec full-width at half maximum (FWHM), where at least ∼40 per cent of flux comes within 0.2, showing that high quality LGS AO observations of these objects are possible. The achieved signal-to-noise ratio (S/N ∼ 50) is sufficiently high to reliably determine the shape of the line-of-sight velocity distribution. We construct axisymmetric three-integral dynamical models which are constrained with both the NIFS and SAURON data. The best-fitting models yield M• = (8.3+2.7-1.3) × 108 M⊙ and (M/L)I = 5.8 ± 0.4 for NGC 524 and M• = (1.4 +0.2-1.3) × 107 M⊙ and (M/L)R = 4.7 ± 0.2 for NGC 2549 (all errors are at the 3σ level). We demonstrate that the wide-field SAURON data play a crucial role in the M/L determination increasing the accuracy of M/L by a factor of at least 5, and constraining the upper limits on black hole masses. The NIFS data are crucial in constraining the lower limits of M• and in combination with the large-scale data reducing the uncertainty by a factor of 2 or more. We find that the orbital structure of NGC 524 shows significant tangential anisotropy, while at larger radii both galaxies are consistent with having almost perfectly oblate velocity ellipsoids. Tangential anisotropy in NGC 524 coincides with the size of SMBH sphere of influence and the core region in the light profile. This agrees with predictions from numerical simulations where core profiles are the result of SMBH binaries evacuating the centre nuclear regions following a galaxy merger. However, being a disc dominated fast rotating galaxy, NGC 524 has probably undergone through a more complex evolution. We test the accuracy to which M• can be measured using seeings obtained from typical LGS AO observations, and conclude that for a typical conditions and M• the expected uncertainty is of the order of 50 per cent. © 2009 RAS.

Dynamical masses of early-type galaxies at z ∼ 2: Are they truly superdense?

Astrophysical Journal 704:1 PART 2 (2009)

Authors:

M Cappellari, S Di Serego Alighieri, A Cimatti, E Daddi, A Renzini, JD Kurk, P Cassata, M Dickinson, A Franceschini, M Mignoli, L Pozzetti, G Rodighiero, P Rosati, G Zamorani

Abstract:

We measured stellar velocity dispersions σ and derived dynamical masses of nine massive (M ≈ 1011 M ⊙) early-type galaxies (ETGs) from the Galaxy Mass Assembly ultra-deep Spectroscopic Survey (GMASS) sample at redshift 1.4 ≲ z ≲ 2.0. The σ are based on individual spectra for two galaxies at z ≈ 1.4 and on a stacked spectrum for seven galaxies with 1.6 < z < 2.0, with 202 hr of exposure at the ESO Very Large Telescope. We constructed detailed axisymmetric dynamical models for the objects, based on the Jeans equations, taking the observed surface brightness (from deep HST/ACS observations), point-spread function, and slit effects into account. Our dynamical masses M Jeans agree within ≲30% with virial estimates M vir = 5 × Reσ2/ G, although the latter tend to be smaller. Our M Jeans also agrees within a factor ≲2 with the M pop previously derived using stellar population models and 11 bands photometry. This confirms that the galaxies are intrinsically massive. The inferred mass-to-light ratios (M/L) U in the very age-sensitive rest-frame U band are consistent with passive evolution in the past 1 Gyr (formation redshift zf ∼3). A "bottom-light" stellar initial mass function appears to be required to ensure close agreement between M Jeans and M pop at z ∼2, as it does at z ∼0. The GMASS ETGs are on average more dense than their local counterpart. However, a few percent of local ETGs of similar dynamical masses also have comparable σ and mass surface density Σ50 inside R e. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Galaxy Zoo: Hanny's Voorwerp, a quasar light echo?

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 399:1 (2009) 129-140

Authors:

CJ Lintott, K Schawinski, W Keel, H Van Arkel, N Bennert, E Edmondson, D Thomas, DJB Smith, PD Herbert, MJ Jarvis, S Virani, D Andreescu, SP Bamford, K Land, P Murray, RC Nichol, MJ Raddick, AZ Slosar, A Szalay, J Vandenberg

Abstract:

We report the discovery of an unusual object near the spiral galaxy IC 2497, discovered by visual inspection of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) as part of the Galaxy Zoo project. The object, known as Hanny's Voorwerp, is bright in the SDSS g band due to unusually strong [O iii]4959, 5007 emission lines. We present the results of the first targeted observations of the object in the optical, ultraviolet and X-ray, which show that the object contains highly ionized gas. Although the line ratios are similar to extended emission-line regions near luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN), the source of this ionization is not apparent. The emission-line properties, and lack of X-ray emission from IC 2497, suggest either a highly obscured AGN with a novel geometry arranged to allow photoionization of the object but not the galaxy's own circumnuclear gas, or, as we argue, the first detection of a quasar light echo. In this case, either the luminosity of the central source has decreased dramatically or else the obscuration in the system has increased within 10 5 yr. This object may thus represent the first direct probe of quasar history on these time-scales. © 2009 RAS.

Kinematic constraints on the stellar and dark matter content of spiral and S0 galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 400:4 (2009) 1665-1689

Authors:

MJ Williams, M Bureau, M Cappellari

Abstract:

We present mass models of a sample of 14 spiral and 14 S0 galaxies that constrain their stellar and dark matter content. For each galaxy, we derive the stellar mass distribution from near-infrared photometry under the assumptions of axisymmetry and a constant KS-band stellar mass-to-light ratio. To this we add a dark halo assumed to follow a spherically symmetric Navarro, Frenk and White profile and a correlation between concentration and dark mass within the virial radius, MDM. We solve the Jeans equations for the corresponding potential under the assumption of constant anisotropy in the meridional plane, βz. By comparing the predicted second velocity moment to observed long-slit stellar kinematics, we determine the three best-fitting parameters of the model: and βz. These simple axisymmetric Jeans models are able to accurately reproduce the wide range of observed stellar kinematics, which typically extend to ≈2-3Re or, equivalently, ≈0.5-1R25. Although our sample contains barred galaxies, we argue a posteriori that the assumption of axisymmetry does not significantly bias our results. We find a median stellar mass-to-light ratio at KS-band of with an rms scatter of 0.31. We present preliminary comparisons between this large sample of dynamically determined stellar mass-to-light ratios and the predictions of stellar population models. The stellar population models predict slightly lower mass-to-light ratios than we measure. The mass models contain a median of 15 per cent dark matter by mass within an effective radius Re (defined here as the semimajor axis of the ellipse containing half the KS-band light) and 49 per cent within the optical radius R25. Dark and stellar matter contribute equally to the mass within a sphere of radius 4.1Re or 1.0 R25. There is no evidence of any significant difference in the dark matter content of the spirals and S0s in our sample. Models without dark matter are also able to satisfactorily reproduce the observed kinematics in most cases. The improvement when a halo is added is statistically significant, however, and the stellar mass-to-light ratios of mass models with dark haloes match the independent expectations of stellar population models better. © 2009 RAS.

Mid-infrared spectroscopy of infrared-luminous galaxies at z ∼ 0.5-3

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 395:3 (2009) 1695-1722

Authors:

A Hernán-Caballero, I Pérez-Fournon, E Hatziminaoglou, A Afonso-Luis, M Rowan-Robinson, D Rigopoulou, D Farrah, CJ Lonsdale, T Babbedge, D Clements, S Serjeant, F Pozzi, M Vaccari, FM Montenegro-Montes, I Valtchanov, E González-Solares, S Oliver, D Shupe, C Gruppioni, B Vila-Vilaró, C Lari, FL Franca

Abstract:

We present results on low-resolution mid-infrared (MIR) spectra of 70 IR-luminous galaxies obtained with the infrared spectrograph (IRS) onboard Spitzer. We selected sources from the European Large Area Infrared Survey with S15 > 0.8 mJy and photometric or spectroscopic z > 1. About half of the samples are quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) in the optical, while the remaining sources are galaxies, comprising both obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN) and starbursts. Redshifts were obtained from optical spectroscopy, photometric redshifts and the IRS spectra. The later turn out to be reliable for obscured and/or star-forming sources, thus becoming an ideal complement to optical spectroscopy for redshift estimation. We estimate monochromatic luminosities at several rest-frame wavelengths, equivalent widths and luminosities for the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) features, and strength of the silicate feature in individual spectra. We also estimate integrated 8-1000 μm IR luminosities via spectral energy distribution fitting to MIR and far-IR (FIR) photometry from the Spitzer Wide-Area Infrared Extragalactic survey and the MIR spectrum. Based on these measurements, we classify the spectra using well-known IR diagnostics, as well as a new one that we propose, into three types of source: those dominated by an unobscured AGN, mostly corresponding to optical quasars (QSOs), those dominated by an obscured AGN and starburst-dominated sources. Starbursts concentrate at z ∼ 0.6-1.0 favoured by the shift of the 7.7-μm PAH band into the selection 15-μm band, while AGN spread over the 0.5 < z < 3.1 range. Star formation rates (SFR) are estimated for individual sources from the luminosity of the PAH features. An estimate of the average PAH luminosity in QSOs and obscured AGN is obtained from the composite spectrum of all sources with reliable redshifts. The estimated mean SFR in the QSOs is 50-100 M⊙ yr-1, but the implied FIR luminosity is 3-10 times lower than that obtained from stacking analysis of the FIR photometry, suggesting destruction of the PAH carriers by energetic photons from the AGN. The SFR estimated in obscured AGN is two to three times higher than in QSOs of similar MIR luminosity. This discrepancy might not be due to luminosity effects or selection bias alone, but could instead indicate a connection between obscuration and star formation. However, the observed correlation between silicate absorption and the slope of the NIR to MIR spectrum is compatible with the obscuration of the AGN emission in these sources being produced in a dust torus. © 2009 RAS.