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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Stellar dynamics in the Galactic centre: Proper motions and anisotropy

TLDR
In this article, a new analysis of the stellar dynamics in the Galactic Centre, based on improved sky and line-of-sight velocities for more than 100 stars in the central few arcseconds from the black hole candidate SgrA*, is presented.
Abstract
We report a new analysis of the stellar dynamics in the Galactic Centre, based on improved sky and line-of-sight velocities for more than 100 stars in the central few arcseconds from the black hole candidate SgrA*. The main results are as follows. (1) Overall, the stellar motions do not deviate strongly from isotropy. For those 32 stars with a determination of all three velocity components, the absolute, line-of-sight and sky velocities are in good agreement, consistent with a spherical star cluster. Likewise the sky-projected radial and tangential velocities of all 104 proper motion stars in our sample are also consistent with overall isotropy. (2) However, the sky-projected velocity components of the young, early-type stars in our sample indicate significant deviations from isotropy, with a strong radial dependence. Most of the bright He i emission-line stars at separations from 1 to 10 arcsec from SgrA* are on tangential orbits. This tangential anisotropy of the He i stars and most of the brighter members of the IRS 16 complex is largely caused by a clockwise (on the sky) and counter-rotating (line of sight, compared to the Galaxy), coherent rotation pattern. The overall rotation of the young star cluster may be a remnant of the original angular momentum pattern in the interstellar cloud from which these stars were formed. (3) The fainter, fast-moving stars within ≈1 arcsec of SgrA* may be largely moving on radial or very elliptical orbits. We have so far not detected deviations from linear motion (i.e., acceleration) for any of them. Most of the SgrA* cluster members are also on clockwise orbits. Spectroscopy indicates that they are early-type stars. We propose that the SgrA* cluster stars are those members of the early-type cluster that happen to have small angular momentum, and thus can plunge to the immediate vicinity of SgrA*. (4) We derive an anisotropy-independent estimate of the Sun–Galactic Centre distance between 7.8 and 8.2 kpc, with a formal statistical uncertainty of ±0.9 kpc. (5) We explicitly include velocity anisotropy in estimating the central mass distribution. We show how Leonard–Merritt and Bahcall–Tremaine mass estimates give systematic offsets in the inferred mass of the central object when applied to finite concentric rings for power-law clusters. Corrected Leonard–Merritt projected mass estimators and Jeans equation modelling confirm previous conclusions (from isotropic models) that a compact central mass concentration (central density ≥1012.6 M⊙ pc−3) is present and dominates the potential between 0.01 and 1 pc. Depending on the modelling method used, the derived central mass ranges between 2.6×106 and 3.3×106 M⊙ for R⊙=8.0 kpc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Coevolution (Or Not) of Supermassive Black Holes and Host Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, supermassive black holes (BHs) have been found in 85 galaxies by dynamical modeling of spatially resolved kinematics, and it has been shown that BHs and bulges coevolve by regulating each other's growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

The slope of the black hole mass versus velocity dispersion correlation

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the range of slopes arises mostly due of sys- tematic differences in the velocity dispersions used by different groups for the same galaxies, and that one significant component of the difference results from Ferrarese & Merritt's extrapolation of central velocity dispersion to re= 8( re is the effective radius) using an empirical formula.
Posted Content

Coevolution (Or Not) of Supermassive Black Holes and Host Galaxies: Supplemental Material

TL;DR: Kormendy and Ho as mentioned in this paper proposed a method to estimate the BH masses for galaxies with active nuclei (AGNs) based on the observational criteria that are used to classify classical and pseudo bulges.
Journal ArticleDOI

The galactic center massive black hole and nuclear star cluster

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the current evidence from the analysis of the orbits of more than two dozen stars and from measurements of the size and motion of the central compact radio source, Sgr A*, that this radio source must be a massive black hole of about 4.4 \times 1e6 Msun, beyond any reasonable doubt.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Demography of massive dark objects in galaxy centers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors constructed dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry and ground-based kinematics, assuming that each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function, arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio, and a central massive dark object of arbitrary mass M•.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Demography of Massive Dark Objects in Galaxy Centres

TL;DR: In this article, the authors constructed dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope photometry and ground-based kinematics, assuming that each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function, arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio Upsilon, and a central massive dark object of arbitrary mass M_bh.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inward Bound—The Search for Supermassive Black Holes in Galactic Nuclei

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review dynamical search techniques, the robustness of the evidence, and BH demographics, and find that supermassive black holes are present in 20% of nearby E-Sbc galaxies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for a black hole from high rotation velocities in a sub-parsec region of NGC4258

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present observations of rotating gas near the centre of the galaxy NGC4258 (Ml06), which indicate the presence of a mass of 3.6 x 1077solar masses in a region less than 0.13 pc in radius.
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