Detection of Galactic Center source G2 at 3.8 $\mu$m during periapse passage
Gunther Witzel, Andrea M. Ghez, Mark R. Morris, Breann N. Sitarski,, Anna Boehle, Smadar Naoz, Randall Campbell, Eric E. Becklin, Gabriela, Canalizo, Samantha Chappell, Tuan Do, Jessica R. Lu, Keith Matthews, Leo, Meyer, Alan Stockton, Peter Wizinowich, Sylvana Yelda

TL;DR
This study presents new infrared observations of the G2 object near the Galactic Center, showing it survived periapse as a star with a dust shell, challenging the gas cloud hypothesis and suggesting a stellar origin.
Contribution
It provides evidence that G2 is a star with a dust shell, not a gas cloud, and proposes it may be a binary star merger product, advancing understanding of Galactic Center objects.
Findings
G2 survived periapse as a compact source
G2's brightness remains consistent over a decade
G2's motion aligns with Keplerian dynamics
Abstract
We report new observations of the Galactic Center source G2 from the W. M. Keck Observatory. G2 is a dusty red object associated with gas that shows tidal interactions as it nears closest approach with the Galaxy's central black hole. Our observations, conducted as G2 passed through periapse, were designed to test the proposal that G2 is a 3 earth mass gas cloud. Such a cloud should be tidally disrupted during periapse passage. The data were obtained using the Keck II laser guide star adaptive optics system (LGSAO) and the facility near-infrared camera (NIRC2) through the K' [2.1 m] and L' [3.8 m] broadband filters. Several results emerge from these observations: 1) G2 has survived its closest approach to the black hole as a compact, unresolved source at L'; 2) G2's L' brightness measurements are consistent with those over the last decade; 3) G2's motion continues to be…
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