A Nearly Naked Supermassive Black Hole

Abstract

During a systematic search for supermassive black holes (SMBHs) not in galactic nuclei, we identified the compact symmetric radio source B3 1715+425 with an emission-line galaxy offset ~ 8.5 kpc from the nucleus of the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in the redshift z = 0.1754 cluster ZwCl 8193. B3 1715+425 is too bright (brightness temperature 3 × 1010 K at observing frequency 7.6 GHz) and too luminous (1.4 GHz luminosity 1025 W/Hz) to be powered by anything but a SMBH, but its host galaxy is much smaller ( 0.9 kpc × 0.6 kpc full width between half-maximum points) and optically fainter (R-band absolute magnitude -18.2) than any other radio galaxy. Its high radial velocity 1860 km/s relative to the BCG, continuous ionized wake extending back to the BCG nucleus, and surrounding debris indicate that the radio galaxy was tidally shredded passing through the BCG core, leaving a nearly naked supermassive black hole fleeing from the BCG with space velocity > 2000 km/s. The radio galaxy has mass < 6 × 109 solar masses and infrared luminosity 3 × 1011 solar luminosities close to its dust Eddington limit, so it is vulnerable to further mass loss from radiative feedback.

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