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91探花
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91探花 we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Hengyue Zhang

Grad Student

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Galaxy formation and evolution
hengyue.zhang@physics.ox.ac.uk
Denys Wilkinson Building, room UC
  • About
  • Publications

WISDOM Project 鈥 XXVII. Giant molecular clouds of the lenticular galaxy NGC 1387: similarities with spiral galaxy clouds

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 547:4 (2026) stag221

Authors:

Fu-Heng Liang, Martin Bureau, Lijie Liu, Pandora Dominiak, Woorak Choi, Timothy A Davis, Jacob Elford, Jindra Gensior, Anan Lu, Ilaria Ruffa, Sel莽uk Topal, Thomas G Williams, Hengyue Zhang

Abstract:

Molecular gas is crucial to understanding star formation and galaxy evolution, but the giant molecular clouds (GMCs) of early-type galaxies (ETGs) have rarely been studied. Here, we present analyses of the spatially resolved GMCs of the lenticular galaxy NGC 1387, exploiting high spatial resolution ( or 14 pc) CO(2-1) line observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. We identify 1285 individual GMCs and measure the fundamental properties (radius, velocity dispersion, and molecular gas mass) of each with a modified version of the CPROPStoo package. Unusually for an ETG, the GMCs of NGC 1387 follow scaling relations very similar to those of the Milky Way disc and Local Group galaxy clouds, and most are virialized. GMCs with large masses and radii and/or small galactocentric distances have their angular momenta aligned with the large-scale galactic rotation, while other GMCs do not. These results show that ETGs have more diversified GMC properties than previously thought. We discuss potential reasons for such diversity, and viewing-angle dependency is a plausible candidate.

Stellar-mass black holes on the millimetre fundamental plane of black hole accretion

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) (2026) stag037

Authors:

Jacob S Elford, Ilaria Ruffa, Timothy A Davis, Martin Bureau, Rob Fender, Jindra Gensior, Thomas Williams, Hengyue Zhang

Abstract:

Abstract Recent work revealed the existence of a galaxy 鈥榤illimetre fundamental plane of black hole accretion鈥, a tight correlation between nuclear 1聽mm luminosity, intrinsic 2 鈥 10聽keV X-ray luminosity and supermassive black hole mass, originally discovered for nearby low- and high-luminosity active galactic nuclei. Here we use mm and X-ray data of 5 X-ray binaries (XRBs) to demonstrate that these stellar-mass black holes also lie on the mm fundamental plane, as they do at radio wavelengths. One source for which we have multi-epoch observations shows evidence of deviations from the plane after a state change, suggesting that the plane only applies to XRBs in the hard state, as is true again at radio wavelengths. We show that both advection-dominated accretion flows and compact jet models predict the existence of the plane across the entire range of black hole masses, although these models vary in their ability to accurately predict the XRB black hole masses.

WISDOM Project鈥揦XVI. Cross-checking supermassive black hole mass estimates from ALMA CO gas kinematics and SINFONI stellar kinematics in the galaxy NGC 4751

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 542:3 (2025) 2039-2059

Authors:

Pandora Dominiak, Michele Cappellari, Martin Bureau, Timothy A Davis, Marc Sarzi, Ilaria Ruffa, Satoru Iguchi, Thomas G Williams, Hengyue Zhang

Abstract:

We present high angular resolution (0.19 arcsec or pc) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of the CO(3鈥2) line emission of the galaxy NGC 4751. The data provide evidence for the presence of a central supermassive black hole (SMBH). Assuming a constant mass-to-light ratio (), we infer a SMBH mass M and a F160W filter stellar M/L, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second systematic. Assuming a linearly spatially varying , we infer M and , where R is the galactocentric radius. We also present SMBH mass estimates using the Jeans Anisotropic Modelling (JAM) method and Very Large Telescope Spectrograph for INtegral Field Observations in the Near Infrared (SINFONI) stellar kinematics. Assuming a cylindrically aligned velocity ellipsoid (JAM), we infer M, and while assuming a spherically aligned velocity ellipsoid (JAM), we infer M. The SMBH mass assuming a constant is statistically consistent with that of JAM, whereas the mass assuming a linearly varying is consistent with both JAM and JAM (within the uncertainties). Our derived masses are larger than (and inconsistent with) one previous stellar dynamical measurement using the Schwarzschild orbit-superposition method and the same SINFONI kinematics.

WISDOM Project鈥揦XV. Improving the CO-dynamical supermassive black hole mass measurement in the galaxy NGC 1574 using high spatial resolution ALMA observations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 541:3 (2025) 2540-2552

Authors:

Hengyue Zhang, Martin Bureau, Ilaria Ruffa, Timothy A Davis, Pandora Dominiak, Jacob S Elford, Federico Lelli, Thomas G Williams

Abstract:

We present a molecular gas dynamical supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass measurement in the nearby barred lenticular galaxy NGC 1574, using Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array observations of the聽12CO(2-1) emission line with synthesised beam full-widths at half-maximum of 0.鈥078脳0.鈥070 (鈮7.5脳6.7 pc2). The observations are the first to spatially resolve the SMBH's sphere of influence (SoI), resulting in an unambiguous detection of the Keplerian velocity increase due to the SMBH towards the centre of the gas disc. We also detect a previously known large-scale kinematic twist of the CO velocity map, due to a position angle (PA) warp and possible mild non-circular motions, and we resolve a PA warp within the central 0.鈥2脳0.鈥2 of the galaxy, larger than that inferred from previous intermediate-resolution data. By forward modelling the data cube, we infer a SMBH mass of (6.2卤1.2)脳107 M鈯 (1蟽 confidence interval), slightly smaller than but statistically consistent with the SMBH mass derived from the previous intermediate-resolution data that did not resolve the SoI, and slightly outside the 1蟽 scatter of the SMBH mass鈥搒tellar velocity dispersion relation. Our measurement thus emphasises the importance of observations that spatially resolve the SMBH SoI for accurate SMBH mass measurements and gas dynamical modelling.

WISDOM project 鈥 XXIII. Star formation efficiencies of eight early-type galaxies and bulges observed with SITELLE and ALMA

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 540:1 (2025) 71-89

Authors:

Anan Lu, Daryl Haggard, Martin Bureau, Jindra Gensior, Carmelle Robert, Thomas G Williams, Fu-Heng Liang, Woorak Choi, Timothy A Davis, Ilaria Ruffa, Sara Babic, Hope Boyce, Michele Cappellari, Benjamin Cheung, Laurent Drissen, Jacob S Elford, Thomas Martin, Carter Rhea, Laurie Rousseau-Nepton, Marc Sarzi, Hengyue Zhang

Abstract:

Early-type galaxies (ETGs) are known to harbour dense spheroids of stars with scarce star formation (SF). Approximately a quarter of these galaxies have rich molecular gas reservoirs yet do not form stars efficiently. These gas-rich ETGs have properties similar to those of bulges at the centres of spiral galaxies. We use spatially resolved observations (鈦犫埣 100 pc resolution) of warm ionized-gas emission lines (H饾浗, [OIII], [NII], H饾浖 and [SII])聽from the imaging Fourier transform spectrograph SITELLE at the Canada鈥揊rance鈥揌awaii Telescope and cold molecular gas [12CO(2鈥1) or聽12CO(3鈥2)] from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array to study the SF properties of eight ETGs and bulges. We use the ionized-gas emission lines to classify the ionization mechanisms and demonstrate a complete absence of regions dominated by SF ionization in these ETGs and bulges, despite abundant cold molecular gas. The ionization classifications also show that our ETGs and bulges are dominated by old stellar populations. We use the molecular gas surface densities and H鈥-derived SF rates (in spiral galaxies outside of the bulges) or upper limits (in ETGs and bulges) to constrain the depletion times (inverse of the SF efficiencies), suggesting again suppressed SF in our ETGs and bulges. Finally, we use the molecular gas velocity fields to measure the gas kinematics, and show that bulge dynamics, particularly the strong shear due to the deep and steep gravitational potential wells, is an important SF regulation mechanism for at least half of our sample galaxies.

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