Evidence for Warped Disks of Young Stars in the Galactic Center
H. Bartko, F. Martins, T. K. Fritz, R. Genzel, Y. Levin, H. B. Perets,, T. Paumard, S. Nayakshin, O. Gerhard, T. Alexander, K. Dodds-Eden, F., Eisenhauer, S. Gillessen, L. Mascetti, T. Ott, G. Perrin, O. Pfuhl, M. J., Reid, D. Rouan, A. Sternberg, S. Trippe

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that the young massive stars near the Galactic Center are arranged in warped disks or streamers, supporting in situ star formation in gaseous disks.
Contribution
The paper presents new observations and detailed analysis showing that the young stars form warped disks or streamers, revealing complex orbital structures near the Galactic Center.
Findings
Half of the stars are part of a warped clockwise system.
The clockwise system has a mean eccentricity of 0.36.
The counter-clockwise stars form a non-isotropic, possibly dissolving structure.
Abstract
The central parsec around the super-massive black hole in the Galactic Center hosts more than 100 young and massive stars. Outside the central cusp (R~1") the majority of these O and Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars reside in a main clockwise system, plus a second, less prominent disk or streamer system at large angles with respect to the main system. Here we present the results from new observations of the Galactic Center with the AO-assisted near-infrared imager NACO and the integral field spectrograph SINFONI on the ESO/VLT. These include the detection of 27 new reliably measured WR/O stars in the central 12" and improved measurements of 63 previously detected stars, with proper motion uncertainties reduced by a factor of four compared to our earlier work. We develop a detailed statistical analysis of their orbital properties and orientations. Half of the WR/O stars are compatible with being…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
