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Abstract
[*] Addendum: "Hubble Space Telescope evidence for an intermediate-mass
black hole in the globular cluster M15 - II. Kinematical analysis and
dynamical modeling"
Gerssen J., van der Marel R.P., Gebhardt K., Guhathakurta P.,
Peterson R., Pryor, C.
It has been reported that there is an error in the figure in Dull et
al. (1997, D97) that shows the radial M/L profile in Fokker-Planck
models of M15. We discuss how this modifies the interpretation of our
kinematical data. These imply the existence of a dark and compact mass
component near the center of M15, either a single black hole (BH) or a
collection of dark remnants that have sunk to the cluster center due
to mass segregation. We previously showed that the latter
interpretation is in conflict with the D97 M/L profile, which
supported the BH interpretation. We repeat our analysis here with the
corrected D97 profile. Models without a BH are now found to be
statistically acceptable (within 1-sigma), although inclusion of a BH
still provides a marginally better fit. It does not necessarily follow
that dark remnants are now the preferred interpretation of the
data. The D97 models, as well as N-body models by Baumgardt et
al. (2002), assume that all neutron stars are retained during cluster
evolution. This conflicts with predictions of the neutron-star
retention rate (typically below 10 per cent) based on pulsar kick
velocities. The presence of a single BH therefore continues to be a
viable interpretation of the data. The best fit BH mass with the
corrected D97 M/L profile is M_BH = 1.7^{+2.7}_{-1.7} x 10^3 solar
masses, and with a constant M/L it is M_BH = 3.2^{+2.2}_{-2.2} x 10^3
solar masses. A model that includes both neutron star escape and mass
segregation would probably yield a value between these numbers. This
agrees with the correlation between velocity dispersion and BH mass
inferred for galaxies. However, with the presently available models
and data it is neither uniquely implied nor ruled out that M15 has an
intermediate-mass BH.
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