Radial Velocities of Stars in the Galactic Center
Qingfeng Zhu, Rolf P. Kudritzki, Donald F. Figer, Francisco Najarro,, and David Merritt

TL;DR
This study provides high-precision radial velocity measurements of stars in the Galactic center, revealing stellar dynamics, a central black hole estimate, and evidence of systematic rotation among early-type stars.
Contribution
It offers the most accurate radial velocities and accelerations for stars in the Galactic center, improving understanding of stellar motions and the central black hole's mass.
Findings
Estimated black hole mass of 3.9 million solar masses.
Detected a low-density region at the Galactic center.
Found systematic rotation among early-type stars.
Abstract
We present results from K band slit scan observations of a ~20''x20'' region of the Galactic center (GC) in two separate epochs more than five years apart. The high resolution (R>=14,000) observations allow the most accurate radial velocity and acceleration measurements of the stars in the central parsec of the Galaxy. Detected stars can be divided into three groups based on the CO absorption band heads at ~2.2935 microns and the He I lines at ~2.0581 microns and ~2.112, 2.113 microns: cool, narrow-line hot and broad-line hot. The radial velocities of the cool, late-type stars have approximately a symmetrical distribution with its center at ~-7.8(+/-10.3) km/s and a standard deviation ~113.7(+/-10.3) km/s. Although our statistics are dominated by the brightest stars, we estimate a central black hole mass of 3.9(+/-1.1) million solar masses, consistent with current estimates from…
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