Article contents
A Supermassive Object in the Nucleus of NGC 4258?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 March 2016
Abstract
VLBI images of the H2O megamaser in NGC 4258 and a time series of spectra taken over several years combine to make a compelling case that there is a compact molecular disk associated with a supermassive object in the nucleus of this galaxy. The images of the maser in the velocity rangenear the systemic velocity show a highly elongated structure with a major axis of about 0.009 pc, along which the gradient in line-of-sight velocity is essentially a constant of 7970 ± 40 km s-1 pc-1. The observed acceleration of these spectral features by about 6-11 km s-1 yr-1, the presence of high-velocity maser satellite emission, and the VLBI results suggest emission from a disk of diameter0.2 pc, rotating with a velocity of ~800 Km s-1, bound by a mass of 1.5×107 M⊙ and denisty of ≳3.6×109 M⊙ pc-3
- Type
- II. Joint Discussions
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Kluwer 1995
References
- 2
- Cited by