Stellar Populations in the Central 0.5 pc of the Galaxy I: A New Method for Constructing Luminosity Functions and Surface-Density Profiles
Tuan Do, Jessica R. Lu, Andrea M. Ghez, Mark R. Morris, Sylvana Yelda,, Gregory D. Martinez, Shelley A. Wright, Keith Matthews

TL;DR
This study introduces a new high-resolution spectroscopic method to analyze stellar populations near the Milky Way's center, revealing detailed surface-density profiles and luminosity functions of young and old stars.
Contribution
It presents a novel completeness correction technique combining simulations and Bayesian inference, extending measurements of stellar distributions around the galactic center.
Findings
Radial surface-density profiles for young and old stars are consistent with earlier results.
Late-type stars have an approximately flat density profile out to the survey edge.
Young stars' luminosity function suggests a less top-heavy mass distribution than previously thought.
Abstract
We present new high angular resolution near-infrared spectroscopic observations of the nuclear star cluster surrounding the Milky Way's central supermassive black hole. Using the integral-field spectrograph OSIRIS on Keck II behind the laser-guide-star adaptive optics system, this spectroscopic survey enables us to separate early-type (young, 4-6 Myr) and late-type (old, >1 Gyr) stars with a completeness of 50% down to K' = 15.5 mag, which corresponds to ~10 \msun for the early-type stars. This work increases the radial extent of reported OSIRIS/Keck measurements by more than a factor of 3 from 4" to 14" (0.16 pc to 0.56 pc), along the projected disk of young stars. For our analysis, we implement a new method of completeness correction using a combination of star-planting simulations and Bayesian inference. We assign probabilities for the spectral type of every source detected in deep…
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