Title: A Supermassive Black Hole in an Ultracompact Dwarf Galaxy Author: Anil Seth (1), Remco van den Bosch (2), Steffen Mieske (3), Holger Baumgardt (4), Mark den Brok (1), Jay Strader (5), Nadine Neumayer (2 and 6), Igor Chilingarian (7), Michael Hilker (6), Richard McDermid (8), Jean Brodie (9), Matthias Frank (10), Jonelle L. Walsh (11) ((1) U. of Utah, (2) MPIA, (3) ESO-Santiago, (4) U. of Queensland, (5) Michigan State U., (6) ESO-Garching, (7) Smithsonian/Sternberg, (8) AAO/Macquarie U., (9) UC Santa Cruz, (10) U. Heidelberg, (11) U. of Texas)
Ultracompact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) are among the densest stellar systems in the universe. These systems have masses up to 200 million solar masses, but half light radii of just 3-50 parsecs. Dynamical mass estimates show that many UCDs are more massive than expected from their luminosity. It remains unclear whether these high dynamical mass estimates are due to the presence of supermassive black holes or result from a non-standard stellar initial mass function that causes the average stellar mass to be higher than expected. Here we present the detection of a supermassive black hole in a massive UCD. Adaptive optics kinematic data of M60-UCD1 show a central velocity dispersion peak above 100 km/s and modest rotation. Dynamical modeling of these data reveals the presence of a supermassive black hole with mass of 21 million solar masses. This is 15% of the object's total mass. The high black hole mass and mass fraction suggest that M60-UCD1 is the stripped nucleus of a galaxy. Our analysis also shows that M60-UCD1's stellar mass is consistent with its luminosity, implying many other UCDs may also host supermassive black holes. This suggests a substantial population of previously unnoticed supermassive black holes.
Smallest Known Galaxy with a Supermassive Black Hole
A University of Utah astronomer and his colleagues discovered that an ultracompact dwarf galaxy harbours a supermassive black hole - the smallest galaxy known to contain such a massive light-sucking object. The finding suggests huge black holes may be more common than previously believed. The astronomers used the Gemini North 8-meter optical-and-infrared telescope on Hawaii's Mauna Kea and photos taken by the Hubble Space Telescope to discover that a small galaxy named M60-UCD1 has a black hole with a mass equal to 21 million suns. Read more