Polarimetry and Astrometry of NIR Flares as Event Horizon Scale, Dynamical Probes for the Mass of Sgr A*
The GRAVITY Collaboration: R. Abuter, N. Aimar, P. Amaro Seoane, A., Amorim, M. Baub\"ock, J.P. Berger, H. Bonnet, G. Bourdarot, W. Brandner, V., Cardoso, Y. Cl\'enet, R. Davies, P.T. de Zeeuw, J. Dexter, A. Drescher, A., Eckart, F. Eisenhauer, H. Feuchtgruber, G. Finger

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared interferometry to analyze flares from Sgr A*, revealing orbital motion of hot spots, magnetic field structure, and supporting a single black hole model with accretion influenced by stellar winds.
Contribution
It provides new astrometric and polarimetric observations of Sgr A* flares, confirming hot spot orbital motion and magnetic field configuration, strengthening the black hole model and accretion flow understanding.
Findings
Hot spots orbit at about 9 gravitational radii.
Magnetic field is predominantly poloidal.
Flares are influenced by stellar winds.
Abstract
We present new astrometric and polarimetric observations of flares from Sgr A* obtained with GRAVITY, the near-infrared interferometer at ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), bringing the total sample of well-covered astrometric flares to four and polarimetric ones to six, where we have for two flares good coverage in both domains. All astrometric flares show clockwise motion in the plane of the sky with a period of around an hour, and the polarization vector rotates by one full loop in the same time. Given the apparent similarities of the flares, we present a common fit, taking into account the absence of strong Doppler boosting peaks in the light curves and the EHT-measured geometry. Our results are consistent with and significantly strengthen our model from 2018: We find that a) the combination of polarization period and measured flare radius of around nine gravitational…
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