The cuspy liner nucleus of the S0/A galaxy NGC 2681
Astrophysical Journal 551:1 PART 1 (2001) 197-205
Abstract:
The nucleus of the bulge-dominated, multiply barred S0/a galaxy NGC 2681 is studied in detail using the high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope Faint Object Camera (FOC), Near-Infrared Camera and Multiobject Spectrometer (NICMOS) imaging, and the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS). The ionized gas central velocity dispersion is found to increase by a factor ≈2 when narrowing the aperture from R ≈ 1″.5 (ground) to R ≈ 0″.1 (FOS). Dynamical modeling of these velocity dispersions suggests that NGC 2681 does host a supermassive black hole (BH) for which one can estimate a firm mass upper limit MThe SAURON project. I. The panoramic integral-field spectrograph
(2001)
The radio galaxy K-z relation to z ~ 4.5
ArXiv astro-ph/0103364 (2001)
Abstract:
Using a new radio sample, 6C* designed to find radio galaxies at z > 4 along with the complete 3CRR and 6CE sample we extend the radio galaxy K-z relation to z~4.5. The 6C* K-z data significantly improve delineation of the K-z relation for radio galaxies at high redshift (z > 2). Accounting for non-stellar contamination, and for correlations between radio luminosity and estimates of stellar mass, we find little support for previous claims that the underlying scatter in the stellar luminosity of radio galaxies increases significantly at z > 2. This indicates that we are not probing into the formation epoch until at least z > 3.Evidence of a supermassive black hole in the galaxy NGC 1023 from the nuclear stellar dynamics
Astrophysical Journal 550:1 PART 1 (2001) 75-86