The Post-Periapse Evolution of Galactic Center Source G1: The second case of a resolved tidal interaction with a supermassive black hole
Gunther Witzel, Breann. N. Sitarski, Andrea M. Ghez, Mark R. Morris,, Aurelien Hees, Tuan Do, Jessica R. Lu, Smadar Naoz, Anna Boehle, Greg, Martinez, Samantha Chappell, Rainer Sch\"odel, Leo Meyer, Sylvana Yelda,, Ereic E. Becklin, Keith Matthews

TL;DR
This study provides detailed observations of Galactic Center source G1, revealing it as a stellar object undergoing tidal interaction with a supermassive black hole, distinct from G2, with evolving size and orbit.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed analysis of G1's orbit, size evolution, and confirms its independent stellar nature, expanding understanding of SMBH interactions.
Findings
G1's orbit is in the same plane as G2 but with a different periapse argument.
G1 is extended near periapse and becomes smaller over time.
G1 persists 14 years after periapse, indicating a stellar origin.
Abstract
We present new Adaptive Optics (AO) imaging and spectroscopic measurements of Galactic Center source G1 from W. M. Keck Observatory. Our goal is to understand its nature and relationship to G2, which is the first example of a spatially-resolved object interacting with the supermassive black hole (SMBH). Both objects have been monitored with AO for the past decade (2003 - 2014) and are comparatively close to the black hole (200-300 AU) on very eccentric orbits (0.99; 0.96). While G2 has been tracked before and during periapse passage ( 2014.2), G1 has been followed since soon after emerging from periapse ( 2001.3). Our observations of G1 double the previously reported observational time baseline, which improves its orbital parameter determinations. G1's orbital trajectory appears to be in the same plane as that…
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