ALMA and VLA measurements of frequency-dependent time lags in Sagittarius A*: evidence for a relativistic outflow
Christiaan D. Brinkerink, Heino Falcke, Casey J. Law, Denis Barkats,, Geoffrey C. Bower, Andreas Brunthaler, Charles Gammie, C. M. Violette, Impellizzeri, Sera Markoff, Karl M. Menten, Monika Moscibrodzka, Alison Peck,, Anthony P. Rushton, Reinhold Schaaf, Melvyn Wright

TL;DR
This study measures frequency-dependent time lags in Sgr A* across radio and mm wavelengths, providing evidence for a relativistic collimated outflow near the supermassive black hole.
Contribution
It presents simultaneous multi-frequency observations of Sgr A* revealing time lags that constrain the outflow's speed and direction, a novel approach in this context.
Findings
Higher frequency maxima lead lower frequency maxima.
Time lags imply a relativistic outflow speed of approximately 0.5c to 0.77c.
Supports the presence of a collimated outflow from Sgr A*.
Abstract
Radio and mm-wavelength observations of Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the radio source associated with the supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy, show that it behaves as a partially self-absorbed synchrotron-emitting source. The measured size of Sgr A* shows that the mm-wavelength emission comes from a small region and consists of the inner accretion flow and a possible collimated outflow. Existing observations of Sgr A* have revealed a time lag between light curves at 43 GHz and 22 GHz, which is consistent with a rapidly expanding plasma flow and supports the presence of a collimated outflow from the environment of an accreting black hole. Here we wish to measure simultaneous frequency-dependent time lags in the light curves of Sgr A* across a broad frequency range to constrain direction and speed of the radio-emitting plasma in the vicinity of the black hole. Light curves…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
