A centi-pc-scale compact radio core in the nearby galaxy M60

Abstract

M60, an elliptical galaxy located 16.5~Mpc away, has an active nucleus with a very low luminosity and an extremely low accretion rate. Its central supermassive black hole has a mass of M BH4.5×109\, M and a Schwarzschild radii corresponding to R S5.4\,μas. To investigate the nature of its innermost radio nucleus, data from the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at 4.4 and 7.6~GHz were reduced. The VLBA images reveal a compact component with total flux densities of 20~mJy at both frequencies, a size of ≤0.27~mas (99.7\% confidence level), about 0.022~pc (50\,R S) at 7.6~GHz, and a brightness temperature of ≥6×109~K. This suggests that the observed centi-parsec-scale compact core could be attributed to a nonthermal jet base or an advection-dominated accretion flow (ADAF) with nonthermal electrons. The extremely compact structure also supports the presence of an SMBH in the center. Our results indicate that M60 is a promising target for broad-band VLBI observations at millimeter wavelengths to probe ADAF scenarios and tightly constrain the potential photon ring (about 28\,μas) around its SMBH.

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