Discovery of a Luminous Blue Variable with an Ejection Nebula Near the Quintuplet Cluster
Jon C. Mauerhan, Mark R. Morris, Angela S. Cotera, Hui Dong, Q. Daniel, Wang, Susan R. Stolovy, Cornelia C. Lang, Ian S. Glass

TL;DR
A newly discovered luminous blue variable near the Quintuplet cluster exhibits a surrounding ejection nebula, showing significant variability and suggesting a recent eruption, which provides insights into massive star evolution in dense clusters.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and spectroscopic confirmation of a new LBV with an ejection nebula near the Quintuplet cluster, highlighting its variability and potential cluster association.
Findings
Identified a new LBV with Paschen-alpha excess.
Detected a circular nebula indicating recent ejection activity.
Observed brightness variability exceeding that of the Pistol Star.
Abstract
We report on the discovery of a luminous blue variable (LBV) lying ~7 pc in projection from the Quintuplet cluster. This source, which we call LBV G0.120-0.048, was selected for spectroscopy owing to its detection as a strong source of Paschen-alpha excess in a recent narrowband imaging survey of the Galactic center region with HST/NICMOS. The K-band spectrum is similar to that of the Pistol Star and other known LBVs. The new LBV was previously cataloged as a photometric variable star, exhibiting brightness fluctuations of up to ~1 mag between 1994 and 1997, with significant variability also occurring on month-to-month time scales. The luminosity of LBV G0.120-0.048, as derived from 2MASS photometry, is approximately equivalent to that of the Pistol Star. However, the time-averaged brightness of LBV G0.120-0.048 between 1994 and 1997 exceeded that of the Pistol Star; LBV G0.120-0.048…
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