Hunting for Supermassive Black Holes in Nearby Galaxies With the Hobby-Eberly Telescope

Access full-text files

Date

2015-05

Authors

van den Bosch, Remco C. E.
Gebhardt, Karl
Gultekin, Kayhan
Yildirim, Akin
Walsh, Jonelle L.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

We have conducted an optical long-slit spectroscopic survey of 1022 galaxies using the 10 m Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) at McDonald Observatory. The main goal of the HET Massive Galaxy Survey (HETMGS) is to find nearby galaxies that are suitable for black hole mass measurements. In order to measure accurately the black hole mass, one should kinematically resolve the region where the black hole dominates the gravitational potential. For most galaxies, this region is much less than an arcsecond. Thus, black hole masses are best measured in nearby galaxies with telescopes that obtain high spatial resolution. The HETMGS focuses on those galaxies predicted to have the largest sphere-of-influence, based on published stellar velocity dispersions or the galaxy fundamental plane. To ensure coverage over galaxy types, the survey targets those galaxies across a face-on projection of the fundamental plane. We present the sample selection and resulting data products from the long-slit observations, including central stellar kinematics and emission line ratios. The full data set, including spectra and resolved kinematics, is available online. Additionally, we show that the current crop of black hole masses are highly biased toward dense galaxies and that especially large disks and low dispersion galaxies are under-represented. This survey provides the necessary groundwork for future systematic black hole mass measurement campaigns.

Department

Description

LCSH Subject Headings

Citation

van den Bosch, Remco CE, Karl Gebhardt, Kayhan Gültekin, Akin Y?ld?r?m, and Jonelle L. Walsh. "Hunting for Supermassive Black Holes in Nearby Galaxies With the Hobby–Eberly Telescope." The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, Vol. 218, No. 1 (May, 2015): 10.