Gemini Near Infrared Spectrograph observations of the central supermassive black hole in Centaurus A

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

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12 pages, 11 figures, to appear in August 2005 issue of AJ (130, 406)

Scientific paper

10.1086/431315

The infrared spectrograph GNIRS on Gemini South unlocks new possibilities to study the central black holes in dusty galaxies that have been inaccessible to previous black hole studies. We exploit good near-infrared seeing to measure the central black hole (BH) of Centaurus A (NGC 5128). We measure the stellar kinematics of NGC 5128 using the region around the CO bandheads at 2.3 microns and determine the black hole mass using orbit-based models. Black holes are believed to be essential components of galaxies, and their evolutionary states appear to be closely linked to those of their hosts. Our current knowledge does not go much beyond this; galaxies such as NGC 5128 (an AGN and recent merger) can further develop this knowledge. However, NGC 5128 and galaxies like it contain large amounts of dust which hamper optical spectroscopy, making near-infrared measurements an attractive alternative. We find a BH mass of 2.4e8 solar masses for an edge-on model, 1.8e8 solar masses for a model with inclination of 45 degrees, and 1.5e8 solar masses for a model with inclination of 20 degrees. We adopt the value for the edge-on model, which has significantly lower chi^2. These estimates are consistent with a previous gas dynamical estimate and are five to ten times higher than that predicted by the correlation between BH mass and velocity dispersion. If NGC 5128 will eventually follow the trend for quiescent galaxies, this result suggests that its BH assembled first before its host component. NGC 5128 thus provides an important example for our knowledge of central black holes; this technique can be applied to other such galaxies to further explore this question.

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