We report new precision measurements of the properties of our Galaxy's supermassive black hole. Based on astrometric (1995Y2007) and radial velocity (RV; 2000Y2007) measurements from the W. M. Keck 10 m telescopes, a fully unconstrained Keplerian orbit for the short-period star S0-2 provides values for the distance (R 0 ) of 8:0 AE 0:6 kpc, the enclosed mass (M bh ) of 4:1 AE 0:6 ; 10 6 M , and the black hole's RV, which is consistent with zero with 30 km s À1 uncertainty. If the black hole is assumed to be at rest with respect to the Galaxy (e.g., has no massive companion to induce motion), we can further constrain the fit, obtaining R 0 ¼ 8:4 AE 0:4 kpc and M bh ¼ 4:5 AE 0:4 ; 10 6 M . More complex models constrain the extended dark mass distribution to be less than 3Y4 ; 10 5 M within 0.01 pc, $100 times higher than predictions from stellar and stellar remnant models. For all models, we identify transient astrometric shifts from source confusion (up to 5 times the astrometric error) and the assumptions regarding the black hole's radial motion as previously unrecognized limitations on orbital accuracy and the usefulness of fainter stars. Future astrometric and RV observations will remedy these effects. Our estimates of R 0 and the Galaxy's local rotation speed, which it is derived from combining R 0 with the apparent proper motion of Sgr A Ã , ( 0 ¼ 229 AE 18 km s À1 ), are compatible with measurements made using other methods. The increased black hole mass found in this study, compared to that determined using projected mass estimators, implies a longer period for the innermost stable orbit, longer resonant relaxation timescales for stars in the vicinity of the black hole and a better agreement with the M bh -relation.
2General Relativity predicts that a star passing close to a supermassive black hole should exhibit a relativistic redshift. We test this using observations of the Galactic center star S0-2. We combine existing spectroscopic and astrometric measurements from 1995-2017, which cover S0-2's 16-year orbit, with measurements in 2018 March to September which cover three events during its closest approach to the black hole. We detect the combination of special relativistic-and gravitational-redshift, quantified using a redshift parameter, Υ. Our result, Υ = 0.88 ± 0.17, is consistent with General Relativity (Υ = 1) and excludes a Newtonian model (Υ = 0 ) with a statistical significance of 5 σ.General Relativity (GR) has been thoroughly tested in weak gravitational fields in the Solar System (1), with binary pulsars (2) and with measurements of gravitational waves from stellarmass black-hole binaries (3,4). Observations of short-period stars in our Galactic center (GC) (5-8) allow GR to be tested in a different regime (9): the strong field near a supermassive black hole (SMBH) (10,11). The star S0-2 (also known as S2) has a 16 year orbit around Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the SMBH at the center of the Milky Way. In 2018 May, it reached its point of closest approach, at a distance of 120 astronomical units (au) with a velocity reaching 2.7% of the speed of light. Within a 6 months interval of that date, the star also passed through its maximum (March) and minimum velocity (September) along the line-of-sight, spanning a range of 6000 km s −1 in radial velocity (RV - Fig. 1). We present observations of all three events and combine them with data from 1995-2017 ( Fig. 2).During 2018, the close proximity of S0-2 to the SMBH causes the relativistic redshift, which is the combination of the transverse Doppler shift from special relativity and the gravitational redshift from GR. This deviation from a Keplerian orbit was predicted to reach 200 km s −1 (Fig. 3) and is detectable with current telescopes. The GRAVITY collaboration (9) previously reported a similar measurement. Our measurements are complementary: i) we present a 3 complete set of independent measurements with 3 additional months of data, doubling the time baseline for the year of closest approach, and including the third turning point (RV minimum) in September 2018, ii) we use three different spectroscopic instruments in 2018, which allows us to probe the presence of instrumental biases, iii) we perform an analysis of the systematic errors that may arise from an experiment spanning over 20 years to test for bias in the result, and iv) we publicly release the stellar measurements and the posterior probability distributions.We use a total of 45 astrometric positional measurements (spanning 24 years) and 115 RVs (18 years) to fit the orbit of S0-2. Of these, 11 are new astrometric measurements of S0-2 from 2016 to 2018 and 28 are new RV measurements from 2017 and 2018 ( Fig 1). Astrometric measurements were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory using speckle imaging (a ...
We present new, more precise measurements of the mass and distance of our Galaxy's central supermassive black hole, Sgr A * . These results stem from a new analysis that more than doubles the time baseline for astrometry of faint stars orbiting Sgr A * , combining 2decades of speckle imaging and adaptive optics data. Specifically, we improve our analysis of the speckle images by using information about a star's orbit from the deep adaptive optics data (2005)(2006)(2007)(2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012)(2013) to inform the search for the star in the speckle years (1995)(1996)(1997)(1998)(1999)(2000)(2001)(2002)(2003)(2004)(2005). When this new analysis technique is combined with the first complete re-reduction of Keck Galactic Center speckle images using speckle holography, we are able to track the short-period star S0-38 (K-band magnitude=17, orbital period=19 yr) through the speckle years. We use the kinematic measurements from speckle holography and adaptive optics to estimate the orbits of S0-38 and S0-2 and thereby improve our constraints of the mass (M bh ) and distance (R o ) of Sgr A * : M bh = (4.02±0.16±0.04) ×10 6 M e and 7.86±0.14±0.04 kpc. The uncertainties in M bh and R o as determined by the combined orbital fit of S0-2 and S0-38 are improved by a factor of 2 and 2.5, respectively, compared to an orbital fit of S0-2 alone and a factor of ∼2.5 compared to previous results from stellar orbits. This analysis also limits the extended dark mass within 0.01 pc to less than 0.13×10 6 M e at 99.7% confidence, a factor of 3 lower compared to prior work.
The supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way plays host to a massive, young cluster that may have formed in one of the most inhospitable environments in the Galaxy. We present new measurements of the global properties of this cluster, including the initial mass function (IMF), age, and cluster mass. These results are based on Keck laser-guide-star adaptive optics observations used to identify the young stars and measure their Kp-band luminosity function as presented in Do et al. (2012). A Bayesian inference methodology is developed to simultaneously fit the global properties of the cluster utilizing the observations and extensive simulations of synthetic star clusters. We find that the slope of the mass function for this cluster is α = 1.7 ± 0.2, which is steeper than previously reported, but still flatter than the traditional Salpeter slope of 2.35. The age of the cluster is between 2.5-5.8 Myr with 95% confidence, which is a younger age than typically adopted but consistent within the uncertainties of past measurements. The exact age of the cluster is difficult to determine since our results show two distinct age solutions (3.9 Myr and 2.8 Myr) due to model degeneracies in the relative number of Wolf-Rayet and OB stars. The total cluster mass is between 14,000 -37,000 M ⊙ above 1 M ⊙ and it is necessary to include multiple star systems in order to fit the observed luminosity function and the number of observed Wolf-Rayet stars. The new IMF slope measurement is now consistent with X-ray observations indicating a factor of 10 fewer X-ray emitting pre-main-sequence stars than expected when compared with a Salpeter IMF. The young cluster at the Galactic center is one of the few definitive examples of an IMF that deviates significantly from the near-universal IMFs found in the solar neighborhood.
We present significantly improved proper motion measurements of the Milky Way's central stellar cluster. These improvements are made possible by refining our astrometric reference frame with a new geometric optical distortion model for the W. M. Keck II 10 m telescope's Adaptive Optics camera (NIRC2) in its narrow field mode. For the first time, this distortion model is constructed from on-sky measurements, and is made available to the public in the form of FITS files. When applied to widely dithered images, it produces residuals in the separations of stars that are a factor of ∼3 smaller compared to the outcome using previous models. By applying this new model, along with corrections for differential atmospheric refraction, to widely dithered images of SiO masers at the Galactic center, we improve our ability to tie into the precisely measured radio Sgr A*-rest frame. The resulting infrared reference frame is ∼2-3 times more accurate and stable than earlier published efforts. In this reference frame, Sgr A* is localized to within a position of 0.6 mas and a velocity of 0.09 mas yr −1 , or ∼3.4 km s −1 at 8 kpc (1σ). Also, proper motions for members of the central stellar cluster are more accurate, although less precise, due to the limited number of these wide field measurements. These proper motion measurements show that, with respect to Sgr A*, the central stellar cluster has no rotation in the plane of the sky to within 0.3 mas yr −1 arcsec −1 , has no net translational motion with respect to Sgr A* to within 0.1 mas yr −1 , and has net rotation perpendicular to the plane of the sky along the Galactic plane, as has previously been observed. While earlier proper motion studies defined a reference frame by assuming no net motion of the stellar cluster, this approach is fundamentally limited by the cluster's intrinsic dispersion and therefore will not improve with time. We define a reference frame with SiO masers and this reference frame's stability should improve steadily with future measurements of the SiO masers in this region (∝ t 3/2 ). This is essential for achieving the necessary reference frame stability required to detect the effects of general relativity and extended mass on short-period stars at the Galactic center.
We present new kinematic measurements and modeling of a sample of 116 young stars in the central parsec of the Galaxy in order to investigate the properties of the young stellar disk. The measurements were derived from a combination of speckle and laser guide star adaptive optics imaging and integral field spectroscopy from the Keck telescopes. Compared to earlier disk studies, the most important kinematic measurement improvement is in the precision of the accelerations in the plane of the sky, which have a factor of six smaller uncertainties (σ ∼10 µas yr −2 ). We have also added the first radial velocity measurements for 8 young stars, increasing the sample at the largest radii (6 ′′ -12 ′′ ) by 25%. We derive the ensemble properties of the observed stars using Monte-Carlo simulations of mock data. There is one highly significant kinematic feature (∼20σ), corresponding to the well-known clockwise disk, and no significant feature is detected at the location of the previously claimed counterclockwise disk. The true disk fraction is estimated to be ∼20%, a factor of ∼2.5 lower than previous claims, suggesting that we may be observing the remnant of what used to be a more densely populated stellar disk. The similarity in the kinematic properties of the B stars and the O/WR stars suggests a common star formation event. The intrinsic eccentricity distribution of the disk stars is unimodal, with an average value of e =0.27±0.07, which we show can be achieved through dynamical relaxation in an initially circular disk with a moderately top-heavy mass function.
We report on the structure of the nuclear star cluster in the innermost 0.16 pc of the Galaxy as measured by the number density profile of late-type giants. Using laser guide star adaptive optics in conjunction with the integral field spectrograph, OSIRIS, at the Keck II telescope, we are able to differentiate between the older, late-type (∼ 1 Gyr) stars, which are presumed to be dynamically relaxed, and the unrelaxed young (∼ 6 Myr) population. This distinction is crucial for testing models of stellar cusp formation in the vicinity of a black hole, as the models assume that the cusp stars are in dynamical equilibrium in the black hole potential. In the survey region, we classified 60 stars as early-type (23 newly identified) and 74 stars as late-type (61 newly identified). We find that contamination from young stars is significant, with more than twice as many young stars as old stars in our sensitivity range (K ′ < 15.5) within the central arcsecond. Based on the late-type stars alone, the surface stellar number density profile, Σ(R) ∝ R −Γ , is flat, with Γ = −0.27 ± 0.19. Monte Carlo simulations of the possible de-projected volume density profile, n(r) ∝ r −γ , show that γ is less than 1.0 at the 99.73 % confidence level. These results are consistent with the nuclear star cluster having no cusp, with a core profile that is significantly flatter than predicted by most cusp formation theories, and even allows for the presence of a central hole in the stellar distribution. Of the possible dynamical interactions that can lead to the depletion of the red giants observable in this survey -stellar collisions, mass segregation from stellar remnants, or a recent merger eventmass segregation is the only one that can be ruled out as the dominant depletion mechanism. The lack of a stellar cusp around a supermassive black hole would have important implications for black hole growth models and inferences on the presence of a black hole based upon stellar distributions.
The nucleation process is crucial to many phase transitions, but its kinetics are difficult to predict and measure. We superheated and melted the interior of thermal-sensitive colloidal crystals and investigated by means of video microscopy the homogeneous melting at single-particle resolution. The observed nucleation precursor was local particle-exchange loops surrounded by particles with large displacement amplitudes rather than any defects. The critical size, incubation time, and shape and size evolutions of the nucleus were measured. They deviate from the classical nucleation theory under strong superheating, mainly because of the coalescence of nuclei. The superheat limit agrees with the measured Born and Lindemann instabilities. C rystal melting is of considerable fundamental and practical importance to science and technology. Yet, our understanding of it is still rather incomplete. Thermodynamics reveals to us the equilibrium phases, but the kinetics of phase transitions have proved difficult to predict (1-3). Crystals melt heterogeneously from surfaces or grain boundaries once they are heated to the melting point (3, 4). By suppressing surface melting (5-8), a single crystal can be superheated to temperatures above its melting point. This metastable state will eventually melt from the interior without any preferential sites. In such homogeneous melting, small liquid nuclei form spontaneously by thermal fluctuations. A spherical nucleus has the free energy (9) DG ¼ 4pr 2 g − 4 3 pr 3 nDm þ E strain ð1Þ where r is the radius, g is the surface tension, n is the number density of the nucleus, ∆m (>0) is the chemical potential difference between the super-heated crystal and liquid, E strain ¼ 4 3 pr 3 nDD is the misfit strain energy in the crystal caused by the volume change of the nucleus, and ∆D is the mean strain energy per particle from continuum elasticity and is not expected to depend on r. E strain is zero when the parent phase is fluid but is finite when the parent phase is solid (10). To minimize ∆G, small liquid nuclei tend to recrystallize rather than grow unless their size exceeds a critical value r* = 2g/[(∆m − ∆)n] corresponding to the barrier height of ∆G. The small length and time scales of the nu-cleation process preclude observation at the single-particle level in molecular systems. In contrast, micrometer-sized colloidal particles can serve as good model systems for phase transition studies because their thermal motions can be directly visualized and measured with video microscopy (11, 12). Crystallization (13), sublimation (14), and heterogeneous melting in polycrystals (4, 15) have been studied in colloids. We used thermal-sensitive N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPA) microgel colloidal spheres (4), whose effective diameter s linearly changes from 0.76 mm at 26.4°C to 0.67 mm at 30.6°C (10). The effective diameter is defined so that the melting volume fraction f m = 54.5%, which is the same as that of the hard spheres. By this definition, the measured freezing point f f = 49%, which is close to ...
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