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The possibility that the masses of supermassive black holes (SBHs) correlate with the total gravitational mass of their host galaxy, or the mass of the dark matter halo in which they presumably formed, is investigated using a sample of 16 spiral and 20 elliptical galaxies. The bulge velocity dispersion, typically defined within an aperture of size less than 0.5 kpc, is found to correlate tightly with the galaxys circular velocity, the latter measured at distances from the galactic center at which the rotation curve is flat, 20 to 80kpc. By using the well known M-sigma relation for SBHs, and a prescription to relate the circular velocity to the mass of the dark matter halo in a standard CDM cosmology, the correlation between velocity dispersion and circular velocity is equivalent to one between SBH and halo masses. Such a correlation is found to be nonlinear, with the ratio between the two masses decreasing from 2X10^-4 for halos of 10^14 solar masses, to 10^-5 for halos of 10^12 solar masses. Preliminary evidence suggests that halos smaller than ~5X10^11 solar masses are increasingly less efficient -- perhaps unable -- at forming SBHs.
We study the relations between the mass of the central black hole (BH) $M_{rm BH}$, the dark matter halo mass $M_{rm h}$, and the stellar-to-halo mass fraction $f_starpropto M_star/M_{rm h}$ in a sample of $55$ nearby galaxies with dynamically measur
We study observed correlations between supermassive black hole (BHs) and the properties of their host galaxies, and show that the observations define a BH fundamental plane (BHFP), of the form M_BH sigma^(3.0+-0.3)*R_e^(0.43+-0.19), or M_BH M_bulge^(
We analyze the intriguing possibility to explain both dark mass components in a galaxy: the dark matter (DM) halo and the supermassive dark compact object lying at the center, by a unified approach in terms of a quasi-relaxed system of massive, neutr
Observational studies of nearby galaxies have demonstrated correlations between the mass of the central supermassive black holes (BHs) and properties of the host galaxies, notably the stellar bulge mass or central stellar velocity dispersion. Motivat