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      The M_bh-sigma diagram, and the offset nature of barred active galaxies

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          Abstract

          From a sample of 50 predominantly inactive galaxies with direct supermassive black hole mass measurements, it has recently been established that barred galaxies tend to reside rightward of the M_bh-sigma relation defined by non-barred galaxies. Either black holes in barred galaxies tend to be anaemic or the central velocity dispersions in these galaxies have a tendency to be elevated by the presence of the bar. The latter option is in accord with studies connecting larger velocity dispersions in galaxies with old bars, while the former scenario is at odds with the observation that barred galaxies do not deviate from the M_bh-luminosity relation. Using a sample of 88 galaxies with active galactic nuclei, whose supermassive black hole masses have been estimated from their associated emission lines, we reveal for the first time that they also display this same general behavior in the M_bh-sigma diagram depending on the presence of a bar or not. A new symmetrical and non-symmetrical "barless" M_bh-sigma relation is derived using 82 non-barred galaxies. The barred galaxies are shown to reside on or up to ~1 dex below this relation. This may explain why narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies appear offset from the "barless" M_bh-sigma relation, and has far reaching implications given that over half of the disk galaxy population are barred.

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          The Vertical Stellar Kinematics in Face-On Barred Galaxies: Estimating the Ages of Bars

          In order to perform a detailed study of the stellar kinematics in the vertical axis of bars, we obtained high signal-to-noise spectra along the major and minor axes of the bars in a sample of 14 face-on galaxies, and used them to determine the line of sight stellar velocity distribution, parameterized as Gauss-Hermite series. With these data, we developed a diagnostic tool that allows one to distinguish between recently formed and evolved bars, as well as estimate their ages, assuming that bars form in vertically thin disks, recognizable by low values for the vertical velocity dispersion sigma_z. Through N-body realizations of bar unstable disk galaxies we could also check the time scales involved in the processes which give bars an important vertical structure. We show that sigma_z in evolved bars is roughly around 100 Km/s, which translates to a height scale of about 1.4 Kpc, giving support to scenarios in which bulges form through disk material. Furthermore, the bars in our numerical simulations have values for sigma_z generally smaller than 50 Km/s even after evolving for 2 Gyr, suggesting that a slow process is responsible for making bars as vertically thick as we observe. We verify theoretically that the Spitzer-Schwarzschild mechanism is quantitatively able to explain these observations if we assume that giant molecular clouds are twice as much concentrated along the bar as in the remaining of the disk.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            08 April 2009
            2009-05-18
            Article
            10.1088/0004-637X/698/1/812
            0904.1290
            923c3b75-f484-42a8-a7ee-a9d66cefc563

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

            History
            Custom metadata
            Astrophys.J.698:812-818,2009
            Short paper: 4 pages of text plus 4 figures and 1 table. Accepted by ApJ
            astro-ph.CO

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