The proper motion of the Arches cluster with Keck Laser-Guide Star Adaptive Optics
Andrea Stolte, Andrea M. Ghez, Mark Morris, Jessica R. Lu, Wolfgang, Brandner, Keith Matthews

TL;DR
This paper reports the first measurement of the Arches cluster's proper motion using Keck laser-guide star adaptive optics, revealing its high velocity and orbital characteristics near the Galactic center, and implications for its origin and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first precise proper motion measurement of the Arches cluster with AO, and analyzes its orbit, origin, and relation to the Galactic center environment.
Findings
Proper motion of 5.6 mas/yr measured over 4.3 years.
3D space velocity of 232 km/s relative to the field.
Arches cluster unlikely to spiral into the Galactic center.
Abstract
We present the first measurement of the proper motion of the young, compact Arches cluster near the Galactic center from near-infrared adaptive optics (AO) data taken with the recently commissioned laser-guide star (LGS) at the Keck 10-m telescope. The excellent astrometric accuracy achieved with LGS-AO provides the basis for a detailed comparison with VLT/NAOS-CONICA data taken 4.3 years earlier. Over the 4.3 year baseline, a spatial displacement of the Arches cluster with respect to the field population is measured to be 24.0 +/- 2.2 mas, corresponding to a proper motion of 5.6 +/- 0.5 mas/yr or 212 +/- 29 km/s at a distance of 8 kpc. In combination with the known line-of-sight velocity of the cluster, we derive a 3D space motion of 232 +/- 30 km/s of the Arches relative to the field. The large proper motion of the Arches cannot be explained with any of the closed orbital families…
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