Title: A low upper mass limit for the central black hole in the late-type galaxy NGC 4414 Author: Sabine Thater, Davor Krajnovic, Martin A. Bourne, Michele Cappellari, Tim de Zeeuw, Eric Emsellem, John Magorrian, Richard M. McDermid, Marc Sarzi, Glenn van de Ven
We present our mass estimate of the central black hole in the isolated spiral galaxy NGC 4414. Using natural guide star adaptive optics assisted observations with the Gemini Near-Infrared Integral Field Spectrometer (NIFS) and the natural seeing Gemini Multi-Object Spectrographs-North (GMOS), we derived two-dimensional stellar kinematic maps of NGC 4414 covering the central 1.5 arcsec and 10 arcsec, respectively, at a NIFS spatial resolution of 0.13 arcsec. The kinematic maps reveal a regular rotation pattern and a central velocity dispersion dip down to around 105 km/s. We constructed dynamical methods using two different methods: Jeans anisotropic dynamical modeling and axisymmetric Schwarzschild modeling. Both modelling methods give consistent results, but we cannot constrain the lower mass limit and only measure an upper limit for the black hole mass of Mbh= 1.56 x 10^6 Msun(at 3 sigma level) which is at least 1 sigma below the recent Mbh-sigma_e relations. Further tests with dark matter, mass-to-light ratio variation and different light models confirm that our results are not dominated by uncertainties. The derived upper limit mass is not only below the Mbh-sigma_e relation, but is also five times lower than the lower limit black hole mass anticipated from the resolution limit of the sphere of influence. This proves that via high quality integral field data we are now able to push black hole measurements down to at least five times less than the resolution limit.
NGC 4414 (also UGC 7539, MCG 5-29-85 and PGC 40692) is a magnitude +11.0 near face-on flocculent unbarred spiral galaxy located 62.3 million light-years away in the constellation Coma Berenices.
The galaxy was discovered by German-British astronomer William Herschel using a 47.5 cm (18.7 inch) f/13 speculum reflector at Datchet, Berkshire on the 13th March 1785.
The galaxy hosted supernovae SN 1974G and SN 2013df. The type Ia supernova 1974G was discovered on April 20, 1974 by W. Burgat. The type II supernova 2013df was discovered on June 7, 2013 by Fabrizio Ciabattari and Emiliano Mazzoni of the Italian Supernovae Search Project (ISSP).
Right ascension 12h 26m 27.1s, Declination +31° 13' 25"