The mass distribution in the Galactic Centre from interferometric astrometry of multiple stellar orbits
GRAVITY Collaboration: R. Abuter, N. Aimar, A. Amorim, J. Ball, M., Baub\"ock, J.P. Berger, H. Bonnet, G. Bourdarot, W. Brandner, V. Cardoso, Y., Cl\'enet, Y. Dallilar, R. Davies, P.T. de Zeeuw, J. Dexter, A. Drescher, F., Eisenhauer, N.M. F\"orster Schreiber, A. Foschi

TL;DR
This study uses advanced interferometric astrometry to precisely measure stellar orbits around Sgr A*, confirming the black hole's mass and detecting relativistic effects, while constraining the distribution of extended mass in the Galactic Centre.
Contribution
It provides the first high-precision interferometric astrometry of multiple stellar orbits around Sgr A*, confirming general relativity and refining the mass and extended mass distribution estimates.
Findings
Black hole mass measured as 4.30 million solar masses with 0.25% precision.
Detection of Schwarzschild precession at 7 sigma significance.
Constraints on extended mass component within the innermost stellar orbits.
Abstract
The stars orbiting the compact radio source Sgr A* in the Galactic Centre are precision probes of the gravitational field around the closest massive black hole. In addition to adaptive optics assisted astrometry (with NACO / VLT) and spectroscopy (with SINFONI / VLT, NIRC2 / Keck and GNIRS / Gemini) over three decades, since 2016/2017 we have obtained 30-100 mu-as astrometry with the four-telescope interferometric beam combiner GRAVITY / VLTI reaching a sensitivity of mK = 20 when combining data from one night. We present the simultaneous detection of several stars within the diffraction limit of a single telescope, illustrating the power of interferometry. The new data for the stars S2, S29, S38 and S55 yield significant accelerations between March and July 2021, as these stars pass the pericenters of their orbits between 2018 and 2023. This allows for a high-precision determination of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
