WISDOM Project -- XIX. Figures of merit for supermassive black hole mass measurements using molecular gas and/or megamaser kinematics

(2024)

Authors:

Hengyue Zhang, Martin Bureau, Mark D Smith, Michele Cappellari, Timothy A Davis, Pandora Dominiak, Jacob S Elford, Fu-Heng Liang, Ilaria Ruffa, Thomas G Williams

WISDOM Project – XIX. Figures of merit for supermassive black hole mass measurements using molecular gas and/or megamaser kinematics

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 530:3 (2024) 3240-3251

Authors:

Hengyue Zhang, Martin Bureau, Mark D Smith, Michele Cappellari, Timothy A Davis, Pandora Dominiak, Jacob S Elford, Fu-Heng Liang, Ilaria Ruffa, Thomas G Williams

Abstract:

The mass (MBH) of a supermassive black hole (SMBH) can be measured using spatially-resolved kinematics of the region where the SMBH dominates gravitationally. The most reliable measurements are those that resolve the smallest physical scales around the SMBHs. We consider here three metrics to compare the physical scales probed by kinematic tracers dominated by rotation: the radius of the innermost detected kinematic tracer Rmin normalised by respectively the SMBH’s Schwarzschild radius (RSchw ≡ 2GMBH/c2, where G is the gravitational constant and c the speed of light), sphere-of-influence (SOI) radius ($R_\mathrm{SOI}\equiv GM_\mathrm{BH}/\sigma _\mathrm{e}^2$, where σe is the stellar velocity dispersion within the galaxy’s effective radius) and equality radius (the radius Req at which the SMBH mass equals the enclosed stellar mass, MBH = M*(Req), where M*(R) is the stellar mass enclosed within the radius R). All metrics lead to analogous simple relations between Rmin and the highest circular velocity probed Vc. Adopting these metrics to compare the SMBH mass measurements using molecular gas kinematics to those using megamaser kinematics, we demonstrate that the best molecular gas measurements resolve material that is physically closer to the SMBHs in terms of RSchw but is slightly farther in terms of RSOI and Req. However, molecular gas observations of nearby galaxies using the most extended configurations of the Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array can resolve the SOI comparably well and thus enable SMBH mass measurements as precise as the best megamaser measurements.

WISDOM Project -- XXIV. Cross-checking supermassive black hole mass estimates from ALMA CO gas kinematics and SINFONI stellar kinematics in the galaxy NGC 4751

(2024)

Authors:

Pandora Dominiak, Michele Cappellari, Martin Bureau, Timothy A Davis, Marc Sarzi, Ilaria Ruffa, Satoru Iguchi, Thomas G Williams, Hengyue Zhang

The first degree-scale starlight-polarization-based tomography map of the magnetized interstellar medium

ArXiv 2404.10821 (2024)

Authors:

V Pelgrims, N Mandarakas, R Skalidis, K Tassis, GV Panopoulou, V Pavlidou, D Blinov, S Kiehlmann, SE Clark, BS Hensley, S Romanopoulos, A Basyrov, HK Eriksen, M Falalaki, T Ghosh, E Gjerløw, JA Kypriotakis, S Maharana, A Papadaki, TJ Pearson, SB Potter, AN Ramaprakash, ACS Readhead, IK Wehus

The first degree-scale starlight-polarization-based tomography map of the magnetized interstellar medium

Astronomy and Astrophysics 684 (2024)

Authors:

V Pelgrims, N Mandarakas, R Skalidis, K Tassis, GV Panopoulou, V Pavlidou, D Blinov, S Kiehlmann, SE Clark, BS Hensley, S Romanopoulos, A Basyrov, HK Eriksen, M Falalaki, T Ghosh, E Gjerløw, JA Kypriotakis, S Maharana, A Papadaki, TJ Pearson, SB Potter, AN Ramaprakash, ACS Readhead, IK Wehus

Abstract:

We present the first degree-scale tomography map of the dusty magnetized interstellar medium (ISM) from stellar polarimetry and distance measurements. We used the RoboPol polarimeter at Skinakas Observatory to conduct a survey of the polarization of starlight in a region of the sky of about four square degrees. We propose a Bayesian method to decompose the stellar-polarization source field along the distance to invert the three-dimensional (3D) volume occupied by the observed stars. We used this method to obtain the first 3D map of the dusty magnetized ISM. Specifically, we produced a tomography map of the orientation of the plane-of-sky component of the magnetic field threading the diffuse, dusty regions responsible for the stellar polarization. For the targeted region centered on Galactic coordinates (l, b) (103.3, 22.3), we identified several ISM clouds. Most of the lines of sight intersect more than one cloud. A very nearby component was detected in the foreground of a dominant component from which most of the polarization signal comes and which we identified as being an intersection of the wall of the Local Bubble and the Cepheus Flare. Farther clouds, with a distance of up to 2 kpc, were similarly detected. Some of them likely correspond to intermediate-velocity clouds seen in H I spectra in this region of the sky. We found that the orientation of the plane-of-sky component of the magnetic field changes along distance for most of the lines of sight. Our study demonstrates that starlight polarization data coupled to distance measures have the power to reveal the great complexity of the dusty magnetized ISM in 3D and, in particular, to provide local measurements of the plane-of-sky component of the magnetic field in dusty regions. This demonstrates that the inversion of large data volumes, as expected from the PASIPHAE survey, will provide the necessary means to move forward in the modeling of the Galactic magnetic field and of the dusty magnetized ISM as a contaminant in observations of the cosmic microwave background polarization.