Axisymmetric, Three-Integral Models of Galaxies: A Massive Black Hole in NGC 3379
Open Access
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astronomical Journal
- Vol. 119 (3) , 1157-1171
- https://doi.org/10.1086/301240
Abstract
We fit axisymmetric three-integral dynamical models to NGC 3379 using the line-of-sight velocity distribution obtained from Hubble Space Telescope FOS spectra of the galaxy center and ground-based long-slit spectroscopy along four position angles, with the light distribution constrained by WFPC2 and ground-based images. We have fitted models with inclinations from 29° (intrinsic galaxy type E5) to 90° (intrinsic E1) and black hole masses from 0 to 109 M⊙. The best-fit black hole masses range from 6 × 107 to 2 × 108 M⊙, depending on inclination. The preferred inclination is 90° (edge-on); however, the constraints on allowed inclination are not very strong, owing to our assumption of constant M/LV. The velocity ellipsoid of the best model is not consistent with either isotropy or a two-integral distribution function. Along the major axis, the velocity ellipsoid becomes tangential at the innermost bin, radial in the midrange radii, and tangential again at the outermost bins. The rotation rises quickly at small radii owing to the presence of the black hole. For the acceptable models, the radial-to-tangential [(σ + σ)/2] dispersion in the midrange radii ranges over 1.1 < σr/σt < 1.7, with the smaller black holes requiring larger radial anisotropy. Compared with these three-integral models, two-integral isotropic models overestimate the black hole mass since they cannot provide adequate radial motion. However, the models presented in this paper still contain restrictive assumptions—namely, assumptions of constant M/LV and spheroidal symmetry—requiring yet more models to study black hole properties in complete generality.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Stellar Kinematic Fields of NGC 3379The Astronomical Journal, 1999
- The dynamical evolution of massive black hole binaries — II. Self-consistent N-body integrationsNew Astronomy, 1997
- Calibration of the Surface Brightness Fluctution Method for use with the Hubble Space Telescope.The Astronomical Journal, 1997
- Recovering Velocity Distributions Via Penalized LikelihoodThe Astronomical Journal, 1997
- The Metallicities and Kinematics of RR Lyrae Variables.II. Galactic Structure and Formation from Local StarsThe Astronomical Journal, 1995
- Planetary nebulae as probes of dark matter in NGC 3384The Astrophysical Journal, 1995
- Interacting binary galaxies. 7: Kinematic data for 12 disturbed ellipticalsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1994
- University of California, Santa CruzNew Directions for Higher Education, 1993
- Evidence for a supermassive black hole in NGC 3115The Astrophysical Journal, 1992
- Photographic and CCD surface photometry of the standard elliptical galaxy NGC 3379The Astronomical Journal, 1990