No asymmetric outflows from Sagittarius A* during the pericenter passage of the gas cloud G2
J.-H. Park (SNU Seoul), S. Trippe (SNU Seoul), T. P. Krichbaum (MPIfR, Bonn), J.-Y. Kim (SNU Seoul), M. Kino (KASI Daejeon), A. Bertarini (MPIfR, Bonn, U Bonn), M. Bremer (IRAM Grenoble), P. de Vicente (Yebes Obs.)

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution radio observations to investigate whether the gas cloud G2 caused asymmetric outflows from Sagittarius A* during its pericenter passage, finding no significant outflows and constraining the accretion rate.
Contribution
First observational constraints on asymmetric outflows from Sgr A* during G2's pericenter passage using VLBI data, limiting outflow size and accretion rates.
Findings
No significant asymmetric outflows detected from Sgr A* in late 2013.
Constraints on outflow size: ~2.5 mas major axis, ~0.4 mas minor axis.
Accretion rate from G2 is less than 0.2 Jy flux contribution.
Abstract
The gas cloud G2 falling toward Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, is supposed to provide valuable information on the physics of accretion flows and the environment of the black hole. We observed Sgr A* with four European stations of the Global Millimeter Very Long Baseline Interferometry Array (GMVA) at 86 GHz on 1 October 2013 when parts of G2 had already passed the pericenter. We searched for possible transient asymmetric structure -- such as jets or winds from hot accretion flows -- around Sgr A* caused by accretion of material from G2. The interferometric closure phases remained zero within errors during the observation time. We thus conclude that Sgr A* did not show significant asymmetric (in the observer frame) outflows in late 2013. Using simulations, we constrain the size of the outflows that we could have missed to ~2.5 mas…
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