Measuring Distance and Properties of the Milky Way's Central Supermassive Black Hole with Stellar Orbits
A. M. Ghez, S. Salim, N. N. Weinberg, J. R. Lu, T. Do, J. K. Dunn, K., Matthews, M. Morris, S. Yelda, E. E. Becklin, T. Kremenek, M. Milosavljevic,, J. Naiman

TL;DR
This study provides precise measurements of the Milky Way's central black hole and its properties using stellar orbits, refining estimates of its mass, distance, and the dark matter distribution near the galactic center.
Contribution
It offers new, more accurate measurements of the black hole's mass and distance, and constrains the dark matter distribution within 0.01 pc, improving understanding of galactic center dynamics.
Findings
Black hole mass estimated at 4.1-4.5 million solar masses.
Galactic center distance (Ro) measured at approximately 8.0-8.4 kpc.
Dark matter within 0.01 pc is less than 3-4x10^5 solar masses.
Abstract
We report new precision measurements of the properties of our Galaxy's supermassive black hole. Based on astrometric (1995-2007) and radial velocity (2000-2007) measurements from the W. M. Keck 10-meter telescopes, a fully unconstrained Keplerian orbit for the short period star S0-2 provides values for Ro of 8.0+-0.6 kpc, M_bh of 4.1+-0.6x10^6 Mo, and the black hole's radial velocity, which is consistent with zero with 30 km/s uncertainty. If the black hole is assumed to be at rest with respect to the Galaxy, we can further constrain the fit and obtain Ro = 8.4+-0.4 kpc and M_bh = 4.5+-0.4x10^6 Mo. More complex models constrain the extended dark mass distribution to be less than 3-4x10^5 Mo within 0.01 pc, ~100x higher than predictions from stellar and stellar remnant models. For all models, we identify transient astrometric shifts from source confusion and the assumptions regarding the…
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