Super-massive black hole wake or bulgeless edge-on galaxy? [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.12344


van Dokkum et al. (2023) reported the serendipitous discovery of a thin linear object interpreted as the trail of star-forming regions left behind by a runaway supermassive black hole (SMBH) kicked out from the center of a galaxy. Despite the undeniable interest in the idea, the actual physical interpretation is not devoid of difficulty. The wake of a SMBH produces only small perturbations on the external medium, which has to be in exceptional physical conditions to collapse gravitationally and form a long (40 kpc) massive (3e9 Msun) stellar trace in only 39 Myr. Here we offer a more conventional explanation: the stellar trail is a bulgeless galaxy viewed edge-on. This interpretation is supported by the fact that its position–velocity curve resembles a rotation curve which, together with its stellar mass, puts the object right on top of the Tully-Fisher relation characteristic of disk galaxies. Moreover, the rotation curve (Vmax sim 110 km/s), stellar mass, extension, width (z0 sim 1.2 kpc), and surface brightness profile of the object are very much like those of IC5249, a well-known local bulgeless edge-on galaxy. These observational facts are difficult to interpret within the SMBH wake scenario. We discuss in detail the pros and cons of the two options.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Almeida, M. Montes and I. Trujillo
Wed, 26 Apr 23
34/62

Comments: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters