Abstract

We analyze the relation between the mass of the central supermassive black hole (Mbh) and the number of globular clusters (Ngc) in elliptical galaxies and bulges as a ramification of the black hole fundamental plane, the theoretically predicted and observed multi-variable correlation between Mbh and bulge binding energy. Although the tightness of the Mbh-Ngc correlation suggests an unlikely causal link between supermassive black holes and globular clusters, such a correspondence can exhibit small scatter even if the physical relationship is indirect. We show that the relatively small scatter of the Mbh-Ngc relation owes to the mutual residual correlation of Mbh and Ngc with stellar mass when the velocity dispersion is held fixed. Thus, present observations lend evidence for feedback-regulated models in which the bulge binding energy is most important; they do not necessarily imply any `special' connection between globular clusters and Mbh. This raises the question of why Ngc traces the formation of ellipticals and bulges sufficiently well to be correlated with binding energy.

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