Galaxy cores as relics of black hole mergers
Date
2002-04Author
Merritt, David
Milosavljevic, Milos
Rest, Armin
van den Bosch, Frank
Metadata
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We investigate the hypothesis that the cores of elliptical galaxies and bulges are created from the binding energy liberated by the coalescence of supermassive binary black holes during galaxy mergers. Assuming that the central density profiles of galaxies were initially steep power laws, p ~ r^ −2, we define the “mass deficit” as the mass in stars that had to be removed from the nucleus in order to produce the observed core. We use nonparametric deprojection to compute the mass deficit in a sample of 35 early-type galaxies with high-resolution imaging data. We find that the mass deficit correlates well with the mass of the nuclear black hole, consistent with the predictions of merger models. We argue that cores in halos of non-interacting dark matter particles should be comparable in size to those observed in the stars (Refer to PDF file for exact formulas).