Testing the Black Hole No-hair Theorem with Galactic Center Stellar Orbits
Hong Qi, Richard O'Shaughnessy, Patrick Brady

TL;DR
This paper develops models to assess how future precise measurements of stellar orbits near the Galactic Center can constrain black hole properties, including spin and quadrupole moment, testing the no-hair theorem.
Contribution
It introduces an analytic Fisher matrix model to predict black hole spin measurement accuracy from stellar orbits, guiding future observational strategies.
Findings
Black hole spin can be measured to ~0.1 precision with 40 years of weekly S2 observations.
Highly eccentric orbits provide better constraints on black hole spin.
Future measurements could test the no-hair theorem with improved stellar orbits.
Abstract
Theoretical investigations have provided proof-of-principle calculations suggesting measurements of stellar or pulsar orbits near the Galactic Center could strongly constrain the properties of the Galactic Center black hole, local matter, and even the theory of gravity itself. In this work, we develop both a Markov chain Monte Carlo and an analytic model (Fisher matrix) to understand what properties are well-constrained and why. We conclude that existing astrometric measurements cannot constrain the spin of the Galactic Center black hole. Extrapolating to the precision and cadence of future experiments, we anticipate that the black hole spin can be measured with the known star S2. Our calculations show that we can measure the dimensionless black hole spin to a precision of 0.1 with weekly measurements of the orbit of S2 for 40 years using the GRAVITY telescope's best resolution at…
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