MONITORING STELLAR ORBITS AROUND THE MASSIVE BLACK HOLE IN THE GALACTIC CENTER
Top Cited Papers
- 20 February 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 692 (2) , 1075-1109
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/692/2/1075
Abstract
We present the results of 16 years of monitoring stellar orbits around the massive black hole in the center of the Milky Way, using high-resolution near-infrared techniques. This work refines our previous analysis mainly by greatly improving the definition of the coordinate system, which reaches a long-term astrometric accuracy of ≈300 μas, and by investigating in detail the individual systematic error contributions. The combination of a long-time baseline and the excellent astrometric accuracy of adaptive optics data allows us to determine orbits of 28 stars, including the star S2, which has completed a full revolution since our monitoring began. Our main results are: all stellar orbits are fit extremely well by a single-point-mass potential to within the astrometric uncertainties, which are now ≈6× better than in previous studies. The central object mass is , where the fractional statistical error of 1.5% is nearly independent from R 0, and the main uncertainty is due to the uncertainty in R 0. Our current best estimate for the distance to the Galactic center is R 0 = 8.33 ± 0.35 kpc. The dominant errors in this value are systematic. The mass scales with distance as (3.95 ± 0.06) × 106(R 0/8 kpc)2.19 M ☉. The orientations of orbital angular momenta for stars in the central arcsecond are random. We identify six of the stars with orbital solutions as late-type stars, and six early-type stars as members of the clockwise-rotating disk system, as was previously proposed. We constrain the extended dark mass enclosed between the pericenter and apocenter of S2 at less than 0.066, at the 99% confidence level, of the mass of Sgr A*. This is two orders of magnitudes larger than what one would expect from other theoretical and observational estimates.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dark matter dynamics in the galactic centerPhysical Review D, 2008
- Brownian Motion of Black Holes in Dense NucleiThe Astronomical Journal, 2007
- The evolution of misaligned accretion discs and spinning black holesMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2006
- Probing Post-Newtonian Physics near the Galactic Black Hole with Stellar Redshift MeasurementsThe Astrophysical Journal, 2006
- Black Hole Spin EvolutionThe Astrophysical Journal, 2004
- Variable Infrared Emission from the Supermassive Black Hole at the Center of the Milky WayThe Astrophysical Journal, 2004
- Near-infrared flares from accreting gas around the supermassive black hole at the Galactic CentreNature, 2003
- The Neutron Star and Black Hole Initial Mass FunctionThe Astrophysical Journal, 1996
- Restoration of Astronomical Images by Iterative Blind DeconvolutionThe Astrophysical Journal, 1993
- An iterative technique for the rectification of observed distributionsThe Astronomical Journal, 1974