High angular resolution integral-field spectroscopy of the Galaxy's nuclear cluster: a missing stellar cusp?
Tuan Do (1), Andrea M. Ghez (1), Mark R. Morris (1), Jessica R. Lu, (2), Keith Matthews (2), Sylvana Yelda (1), James Larkin (1) ((1) University, of California, Los Angeles, (2) Caltech, Pasadena)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution integral-field spectroscopy to analyze the stellar density profile in the Galaxy's nucleus, finding no evidence of a stellar cusp and suggesting a flat or core-like distribution contrary to many theoretical models.
Contribution
First detailed measurement of the late-type stellar density profile in the Galactic center using adaptive optics and integral field spectroscopy, challenging existing cusp formation theories.
Findings
Late-type stars show a flat density profile with no cusp.
The volume density slope is less than 1.0 at 99.73% confidence.
Mass segregation is unlikely to be the main cause of stellar depletion.
Abstract
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. Based on the late-type stars alone, the surface stellar number density profile, , is flat, with . Monte Carlo simulations of the possible de-projected volume density profile, n(r)…
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