Abstract

We used the PMAS integral field spectrograph to obtain large sets of radial velocities in the central regions of three northern Galactic globular clusters: M3, M13, and M92. By applying the novel technique of crowded field 3D spectroscopy, we measured radial velocities for about 80 stars within the central ~ 10 arcsec of each cluster. These are by far the largest spectroscopic datasets obtained in the innermost parts of these clusters up to now. To obtain kinematical data across the whole extent of the clusters, we complement our data with measurements available in the literature. We combine our velocity measurements with surface brightness profiles to analyse the internal dynamics of each cluster using spherical Jeans models, and investigate whether our data provide evidence for an intermediate-mass black hole in any of the clusters. The surface brightness profiles reveal that all three clusters are consistent with a core profile, although shallow cusps cannot be excluded. We find that spherical Jeans models with a constant mass-to-light ratio provide a good overall representation of the kinematical data. A massive black hole is required in none of the three clusters to explain the observed kinematics. Our 1sigma (3sigma) upper limits are 5300 M_sun (12000 M_sun) for M3, 8600 M_sun (13000 M_sun) for M13, and 980 M_sun (2700 M_sun) for M92. A puzzling circumstance is the existence of several potential high velocity stars in M3 and M13, as their presence can account for the majority of the discrepancies that we find in our mass limits compared to M92.

Highlights

  • Over the past years, the search for intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) has attracted remarkable attention

  • In a sample recently studied by Lützgendorf et al (2012b, 2013), the kinematics in 2 out of 7 clusters suggested the presence of an IMBH, while for the remaining clusters upper limits of typically >1000 solar masses were derived

  • All claimed IMBH detections come from integrated light spectroscopy, whereas studies based on the kinematics of resolved stars derived upper limits which in some cases are in conflict with the detections from the former approach

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Summary

Introduction

The search for intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) has attracted remarkable attention. In a sample recently studied by Lützgendorf et al (2012b, 2013), the kinematics in 2 out of 7 clusters suggested the presence of an IMBH, while for the remaining clusters upper limits of typically >1000 solar masses were derived. All claimed IMBH detections come from integrated light spectroscopy, whereas studies based on the kinematics of resolved stars derived upper limits which in some cases are in conflict with the detections from the former approach. This may suggest that the influence of the few brightest stars still hampers the integrated light measurements.

Target selection
Observations
Data reduction
Generating a complete source list
Determination of the cluster centres
Deblending spectra in the PMAS data
Source selection
Source coordinates
Extraction of spectra
Literature data
Comparison between PMAS and literature data
Variable stars
Cluster dynamics
Rotation in the clusters
Velocity dispersion profiles
Jeans modelling
Discussion
Conclusions
Scattered light subtraction
Flat fielding
Full Text
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