GeminiFocus January 2016 | Page 11

A Massive Black Hole in a Possible Relic Galaxy New results based on Gemini observations of the compact, early-type galaxy NGC 1277 yield a new, lower than previously determined, mass of its central supermassive black hole. The work also has more profound implications for galaxy formation, suggesting that massive black holes were formed before stars came into place. Jonelle Walsh (Texas A&M University) and collaborators used the Near-infrared Integral Field Spectrometer (NIFS) and laser-assisted adaptive optics on the Gemini North telescope to obtain high-resolution observations within about 1,400 light years of NGC 1277’s center. These provide both sensitive data within the black hole sphere of influence and simultaneously cover extended regions where stars are more important. The team used these data to determine a lower black hole mass — by a factor of about three (4.9 x 109 MSun) — compared with earlier findings; still the black hole at the heart of this galaxy remains one of the most massive ever measured. This result puts NGC 1277 well above the standard relationship between black hole mass and galaxy luminosity, placing it close to the relationship between black hole mass and bulge stellar velocity dispersion (the “Msigma relation”; Figure 3). These observations and previous work identify NGC 1277 as a relic galaxy — one that has suffered only passive evolution (the aging of stars) over time, rather than the mergers and transformations that result in giant elliptical galaxies in the nearby Universe. Such relics offer windows into the early Universe and galaxy formation. Based on these results and similar examples, the authors suggest that black holes formed first, followed by star formation, to end up with galaxies that exhibit the usual relations. The complete paper will be published in The Astrophysical Journal, and a preprint is now available. Nancy A. Levenson is Deputy Director and Head of Science at Gemini Observatory and can be reached at: [email protected] Figure 3. NGC 1277 and other similar rotating, highdispersion, early-type galaxies (red) are consistent with the M-sigma relation (left), but appear to be overluminous relative to their black hole mass (right). January 2016 GeminiFocus 9