UM 625 Revisited: Multiwavelength Study of A Seyfert 1 Galaxy with a Low-mass Black Hole
Abstract
UM 625, previously identified as a narrow-line active galactic nucleus (AGN), actually exhibits broad \ and \ lines whose width and luminosity indicate a low black hole mass of 1.6 × 106 . We present a detailed multiwavelength study of the nuclear and host galaxy properties of UM 625. Analysis of \ and \ observations suggests that this system contains a heavily absorbed and intrinsically X-ray weak (=-1.72) nucleus. Although not strong enough to qualify as radio-loud, UM 625 does belong to a minority of low-mass AGNs detected in the radio. The broad-band spectral energy distribution constrains the bolometric luminosity to ≈(0.5-3)×1043 \ and ≈0.02-0.15. A comprehensive analysis of Sloan Digital Sky Survey and Hubble Space Telescope\ images shows that UM 625 is a nearly face-on S0 galaxy with a prominent, relatively blue pseudobulge (\ index n = 1.60) that accounts for 60% of the total light in the R band. The extended disk is featureless, but the central 150-400 pc contains a conspicuous semi-ring of bright, blue star-forming knots, whose integrated ultraviolet luminosity suggests a star formation rate of 0.3 yr-1. The mass of the central black hole roughly agrees with the value predicted from its bulge velocity dispersion but is significantly lower than that expected from its bulge luminosity.
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