The Slope of the Black Hole Mass versus Velocity Dispersion Correlation

Type: Article

Publication Date: 2002-08-01

Citations: 2292

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/341002

Abstract

Observations of nearby galaxies reveal a strong correlation between the mass of the central dark object M and the velocity dispersion sigma of the host galaxy, of the form log(M/M_sun) = a + b*log(sigma/sigma_0); however, published estimates of the slope b span a wide range (3.75 to 5.3). Merritt & Ferrarese have argued that low slopes (<4) arise because of neglect of random measurement errors in the dispersions and an incorrect choice for the dispersion of the Milky Way Galaxy. We show that these explanations account for at most a small part of the slope range. Instead, the range of slopes arises mostly because of systematic differences in the velocity dispersions used by different groups for the same galaxies. The origin of these differences remains unclear, but we suggest that one significant component of the difference results from Ferrarese & Merritt's extrapolation of central velocity dispersions to r_e/8 (r_e is the effective radius) using an empirical formula. Another component may arise from dispersion-dependent systematic errors in the measurements. A new determination of the slope using 31 galaxies yields b=4.02 +/- 0.32, a=8.13 +/- 0.06, for sigma_0=200 km/s. The M-sigma relation has an intrinsic dispersion in log M that is no larger than 0.3 dex. In an Appendix, we present a simple model for the velocity-dispersion profile of the Galactic bulge.

Locations

  • The Astrophysical Journal - View - PDF
  • arXiv (Cornell University) - View - PDF
  • DataCite API - View

Similar Works

Action Title Year Authors
+ A Relationship between Nuclear Black Hole Mass and Galaxy Velocity Dispersion 2000 Karl Gebhardt
R. Bender
Gary Bower
Alan Dressler
S. M. Faber
A. V. Filippenko
Richard F. Green
Carl J. Grillmair
Luis C. Ho
John Kormendy
+ PDF Chat The black hole mass–stellar velocity dispersion correlation: bulges versus pseudo-bulges 2008 Jian Hu
+ PDF Chat STELLAR MASS VERSUS STELLAR VELOCITY DISPERSION: WHICH IS BETTER FOR LINKING GALAXIES TO THEIR DARK MATTER HALOS? 2012 Cheng Li
Lixin Wang
Y. P. Jing
+ PDF Chat CONNECTING DARK MATTER HALOS WITH THE GALAXY CENTER AND THE SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE 2015 Ákos Bogdån
Andy D. Goulding
+ PDF Chat A log-quadratic relation between the nuclear black hole masses and velocity dispersions of galaxies 2005 J. Stuart B. Wyithe
+ PDF Chat Dwarf galaxies and the black hole scaling relations 2020 A. R. King
Rebecca Nealon
+ PDF Chat On the Black Hole Mass-Bulge Mass Relation 2004 Nadine Hring
Hans‐Walter Rix
+ PDF Chat The dichotomy of dark matter fraction and total mass density slope of galaxies over five dex in mass 2019 C. Tortora
Lorenzo Posti
L. V. E. Koopmans
N. R. Napolitano
+ PDF Chat THE BLACK HOLE–DARK MATTER HALO CONNECTION 2015 B. Sabra
Charbel Saliba
Maya Abi Akl
Gilbert Chahine
+ PDF Chat -σ relation between supermassive black holes and the velocity dispersion of globular cluster systems 2012 Raphael Sadoun
J. Colin
+ PDF Chat On the Linearity of the Black Hole–Bulge Mass Relation in Active and in Nearby Galaxies 2001 Ari Laor
+ PDF Chat THE BLACK HOLE MASS-STELLAR VELOCITY DISPERSION RELATIONSHIP FOR QUASARS IN THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY DATA RELEASE 7 2013 S. Salviander
G. A. Shields
+ PDF Chat Beyond the Bulge: A Fundamental Relation between Supermassive Black Holes and Dark Matter Halos 2002 Laura Ferrarese
+ PDF Chat The correlation between black hole mass and bulge velocity dispersion in hierarchical galaxy formation models 2000 Martin G. Haehnelt
Guinevere Kauffmann
+ REVISITING THE SCALING RELATIONS OF BLACK HOLE MASSES AND HOST GALAXY PROPERTIES 2013 Nicholas J. McConnell
Chung‐Pei Ma
+ Tracing the relation between black holes and dark haloes 2003 P. Buyle
M. Baes
H. Dejonghe
+ Tracing the relation between black holes and dark haloes 2003 P. Buyle
M. Baes
H. Dejonghe
+ PDF Chat Cosmic Evolution of Black Holes And Spheroids. 1, the M(BH)-Sigma Relation at Z=0.36 2006 Jong-Hak Woo
Tommaso Treu
Matthew A. Malkan
R. D. Blandford
+ PDF Chat HOW IMPORTANT IS THE DARK MATTER HALO FOR BLACK HOLE GROWTH? 2011 Marta Volonteri
Priyamvada Natarajan
Kayhan GĂźltekin
+ Inferences on Relations between Distant Supermassive Black Holes and Their Hosts Complemented by the Galaxy Fundamental Plane 2022 J. D. Silverman
Junyao Li
Xuheng Ding

Works That Cite This (2022)

Action Title Year Authors
+ PDF Chat NGC 6240: merger-induced star formation and gas dynamics 2010 H. Engel
R. Davies
R. Genzel
L. J. Tacconi
E. K. S. Hicks
E. Sturm
Thorsten Naab
Peter H. Johansson
Simon J. Karl
C. E. Max
+ PDF Chat A comprehensive analysis of the hard X-ray spectra of bright Seyfert galaxies 2016 P. Lubiński
V. Beckmann
L. Gibaud
S. Paltani
I. E. Papadakis
ClĂĄudio Ricci
S. Soldi
M. TĂźrler
R. Walter
A. A. Zdziarski
+ PDF Chat Extreme-mass-ratio inspirals produced by tidal capture of binary black holes 2018 Xian Chen
Wen-Biao Han
+ PDF Chat Discovery of a Time Lag between the Soft X-Ray and Radio Emission of the Tidal Disruption Flare ASASSN-14li: Evidence for Linear Disk–Jet Coupling 2018 Dheeraj R. Pasham
Sjoert van Velzen
+ PDF Chat The role of the supermassive black hole spin in the estimation of the EMRI event rate 2013 Pau Amaro‐Seoane
Carlos F. Sopuerta
Marc Freitag
+ PDF Chat C iv black hole mass measurements with the Australian Dark Energy Survey (OzDES) 2019 J. K. Hoormann
Paul Martini
T. M. Davis
A. L. King
C. Lidman
D. Mudd
R. Sharp
N. E. Sommer
B. Tucker
Zhefu Yu
+ PDF Chat PROBING THE PHYSICS OF NARROW-LINE REGIONS IN ACTIVE GALAXIES. III. ACCRETION AND COCOON SHOCKS IN THE LINER NGC 1052 2015 M. A. Dopita
I-Ting Ho
Linda Dressel
Ralph S. Sutherland
Lisa J. Kewley
R. L. Davies
Elise Hampton
P. Shastri
P. Kharb
Jessy Jose
+ PDF Chat PROBING THE PHYSICS OF NARROW LINE REGIONS IN ACTIVE GALAXIES. II. THE SIDING SPRING SOUTHERN SEYFERT SPECTROSCOPIC SNAPSHOT SURVEY (S7) 2015 M. A. Dopita
P. Shastri
R. L. Davies
Lisa J. Kewley
Elise Hampton
J. Scharwächter
Ralph S. Sutherland
P. Kharb
Jessy Jose
H. C. Bhatt
+ PDF Chat Calibration of the virial factor f in supermassive black hole masses of reverberation-mapped AGNs 2019 Li-Ming Yu
Wei‐Hao Bian
Chan Wang
Bi-Xuan Zhao
Xue Ge
+ PDF Chat Using LISA-like gravitational wave detectors to search for primordial black holes 2019 Huai-Ke Guo
Jing Shu
Yue Zhao

Works Cited by This (45)

Action Title Year Authors
+ Evidence for a 3 x 10^8 solar mass black hole in NGC 7052 from HST observations of the nuclear gas disk 1998 Roeland P. van der Marel
Frank C. van den Bosch
+ Bayesian Data Analysis: Straight-line fitting 1989 Stephen Gull
+ PDF Chat The Black Hole in IC 1459 from [ITAL]HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE[/ITAL][ITAL]Hubble Space Telescope[/ITAL] Observations of the Ionized Gas Disk 2000 G. A. Verdoes Kleijn
Roeland P. van der Marel
C. M. Carollo
P. T. de Zeeuw
+ PDF Chat A geometric distance to the galaxy NGC4258 from orbital motions in a nuclear gas disk 1999 J. R. Herrnstein
J. M. Moran
L. J. Greenhill
P. J. Diamond
Makoto Inoue
Naomasa Nakai
Makoto Miyoshi
C. Henkel
Adam G. Riess
+ PDF Chat Dynamics of the nuclear gas and dust disc in the E4 radio galaxy NGC 7052 1995 Frank C. van den Bosch
Roeland P. van der Marel
+ The black hole in IC 1459 from HST observations of the ionized gas disk 2000 G. A. Verdoes Kleijn
Roeland P. van der Marel
C. M. Carollo
P. T. de Zeeuw
+ PDF Chat Improved Evidence for a Black Hole in M32 from<i>HST</i>/FOS Spectra. II. Axisymmetric Dynamical Models 1998 Roeland P. van der Marel
N. Cretton
P. T. de Zeeuw
Hans‐Walter Rix
+ PDF Chat Stellar dynamics in the Galactic Centre: proper motions and anisotropy 2000 R. Genzel
Christophe Pichon
A. Eckart
Ortwin Gerhard
Thomas Ott
+ PDF Chat K Giants in Baade's Window. I. Velocity and Line-Strength Measurements 1995 D. M. Terndrup
E. M. Sadler
R. Michael Rich
+ PDF Chat A Nonparametric Estimate of the Mass of the Central Black Hole in the Galaxy 2001 Dalia Chakrabarty
Prasenjit Saha