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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Michele Cappellari

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Galaxy formation and evolution
  • Extremely Large Telescope
michele.cappellari@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73647
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 755
  • About
  • Publications

Stellar Population Synthesis with Distinct Kinematics: Multiage Asymmetric Drift in SDSS-IV MaNGA Galaxies

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 901:2 (2020) 101

Authors:

Shravan Shetty, Matthew A Bershady, Kyle B Westfall, Michele Cappellari, Niv Drory, David R Law, Renbin Yan, Kevin Bundy
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Census and classification of low-surface-brightness structures in nearby early-type galaxies from the MATLAS survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 498:2 (2020) 2138-2166

Authors:

Michal Bílek, Pierre-Alain Duc, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Stephen Gwyn, Michele Cappellari, David V Bekaert, Paolo Bonfini, Theodoros Bitsakis, Sanjaya Paudel, Davor Krajnović, Patrick R Durrell, Francine Marleau
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Census and classification of low-surface-brightness structures in nearby early-type galaxies from the MATLAS survey

(2020)

Authors:

Michal Bílek, Pierre-Alain Duc, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Stephen Gwyn, Michele Cappellari, David V Bekaert, Paolo Bonfini, Theodoros Bitsakis, Sanjaya Paudel, Davor Krajnović, Patrick R Durrell, Francine Marleau
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Revealing the Intermediate Mass Black Hole at the Heart of Dwarf Galaxy NGC404 with Sub-parsec Resolution ALMA Observations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 496:4 (2020) 4061-4078

Authors:

Martin Bureau, Michele Cappellari, Lijie Liu, Mark Smith

Abstract:

We estimate the mass of the intermediate-mass black hole at the heart of the dwarf elliptical galaxy NGC 404 using Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the molecular interstellar medium at an unprecedented linear resolution of ≈0.5 pc, in combination with existing stellar kinematic information. These ALMA observations reveal a central disc/torus of molecular gas clearly rotating around the black hole. This disc is surrounded by a morphologically and kinematically complex flocculent distribution of molecular clouds, that we resolve in detail. Continuum emission is detected from the central parts of NGC 404, likely arising from the Rayleigh–Jeans tail of emission from dust around the nucleus, and potentially from dusty massive star-forming clumps at discrete locations in the disc. Several dynamical measurements of the black hole mass in this system have been made in the past, but they do not agree. We show here that both the observed molecular gas and stellar kinematics independently require a ≈ 5 × 105 M black hole once we include the contribution of the molecular gas to the potential. Our best estimate comes from the high-resolution molecular gas kinematics, suggesting the black hole mass of this system is 5.5+4.1−3.8×105 M (at the 99% confidence level), in good agreement with our revised stellar kinematic measurement and broadly consistent with extrapolations from the black hole mass – velocity dispersion and black hole mass – bulge mass relations. This highlights the need to accurately determine the mass and distribution of each dynamically important component around intermediate-mass black holes when attempting to estimate their masses.
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SDSS-IV MaNGA: stellar population correlates with stellar root-mean-square velocity Vrms gradients or total-density-profile slopes at fixed effective velocity dispersion σe

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 495:4 (2020) 4820-4827

Authors:

Shengdong Lu, Michele Cappellari, Shude Mao, Junqiang Ge, Ran Li
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