Hubble Space Telescope Evidence for an Intermediate-Mass Black Hole in the Globular Cluster M15. I. STIS Spectroscopy and WFPC2 Photometry
Roeland P. van der Marel,Joris Gerssen,Puragra Guhathakurta,Puragra Guhathakurta,Ruth C. Peterson,Karl Gebhardt +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a project with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to measure the line-of-sight velocities of stars in the central few arcseconds of the dense globular cluster M15.
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Abstract: In this series of two papers, we describe a project with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to measure the line-of-sight velocities of stars in the central few arcseconds of the dense globular cluster M15. The main goal of this project is to search for the possible presence of an intermediate-mass central black hole. This first paper focuses on the observations and reduction of the data. We scanned the central region of M15 spectroscopically by consecutively placing the 01 HST/STIS slit at 18 adjacent positions. The spectral pixel size exceeds the velocity dispersion of M15. This puts the project at the limit of what is feasible with STIS, and exceedingly careful and complicated data reduction and analysis were required. We applied corrections for the following effects: drifts in the STIS wavelength scale during an HST orbit; the orbital velocity component of HST along the line of sight to the cluster, and its variations during the HST orbit; and the apparent wavelength shift that is perceived for a star that is not centered in the slit. The latter correction is particularly complicated and requires many pieces of information: (1) the positions and magnitudes of all the stars near the center of M15; (2) accurate positionings of the STIS slits during the observations; (3) and the HST/STIS point-spread function (PSF) and line-spread function (LSF). To address the first issue we created a stellar catalog of M15 from the existing HST/WFPC2 data discussed previously by Guhathakurta et al., but with an improved astrometric and photometric calibration. The catalog is distributed electronically as part of this paper. It contains 31,983 stars with their positions and U, B, and V magnitudes. To address the second issue, we model the observed intensity profiles along the STIS slits to determine the slit positionings to 0007 accuracy in each coordinate. To address the third issue, we obtained observations of a bright field star to which we fitted multi-Gaussian PSF and LSF models. Upon reduction of the M15 spectroscopy we ultimately obtain 19,200 one-dimensional STIS spectra, each for a different aperture position in M15, with a velocity scale accurate to better than 2.5 km s-1. We develop an algorithm that co-adds the spectra for individual apertures and use it to extract spectra of individual stars with minimum blending and maximum signal-to-noise ratio. In Paper II we use these spectra to extract reliable line-of-sight velocities for 64 stars, half of which reside within R = 24 from the cluster center. These velocities constrain the central structure, dynamics, and mass distribution of the cluster.
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Citations
Merging hierarchical triple black hole systems with intermediate-mass black holes in population III star clusters
Shuai Liu,Long Wang,Yi-Ming Hu,Ataru Tanikawa,Alessandro A. Trani +4 more
TL;DR: This study investigates the long-term evolution of Population III star clusters, finding a high likelihood of hierarchical triple black holes merging into intermediate-mass black holes with masses ~100M⊙, potentially detectable by GW detectors.
Orbital Monitoring of the AstraLux Large M-dwarf Multiplicity Sample
Markus Janson,Markus Janson,Markus Janson,C. Bergfors,C. Bergfors,Wolfgang Brandner,Mickael Bonnefoy,Joshua E. Schlieder,Rainer Köhler,Felix Hormuth,Thomas Henning,Stefan Hippler +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the continued astrometric monitoring of the more than 200 binaries of the AstraLux Large Multiplicity Survey, building both on their previous work, archival data, and new ASTrometric data spanning the range of 2010-2012, identifying 30 targets that both have indications of being young and for which an orbit either has been closed or appears possible to close in a reasonable timeframe (a few years to a few decades).
Black hole at the center of the globular cluster M15: Estimation of the mass and specific angular momentum
A. A. Kiselev,Yu. N. Gnedin,N. A. Shakht,E. A. Grosheva,M. Yu. Piotrovich,T. M. Natsvlishvili +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the mass of the central object in the globular cluster M15 has been estimated based on the sum of the masses of double stars, and the radial velocities of stars at distances up to 1″ from the cluster center have been used.
Addendum: "The Dynamics of M15: Observations of the Velocity Dispersion Profile and Fokker-Planck Models" (ApJ, 481, 267 [1997])
J. D. Dull,Haldan N. Cohn,Phyllis M. Lugger,Brian W. Murphy,Patrick Seitzer,Paul J. Callanan,R. G. M. Rutten,P. A. Charles +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present corrected versions of Figures 9, 10, and 12, and an expanded version of Figure 6, showing that the D97 model predictions are in good agreement with the moderately rising HST-STIS velocity dispersion profile for M15 reported by Gerssen et al.
The AstraLux multiplicity survey: Extension to late M-dwarfs
Markus Janson,Markus Janson,C. Bergfors,C. Bergfors,Wolfgang Brandner,Natalia Kudryavtseva,Felix Hormuth,Stefan Hippler,Thomas Henning +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a multiplicity study of ∼700 early/mid M-type stars observed with the AstraLux high-resolution Lucky Imaging cameras, and detected 68 confirmed or probable companions in 66 systems, of which 41 were previously undiscovered.
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