Impact of a granular mass distribution on the orbit of S2 in the Galactic center
Matteo Sadun Bordoni, Roberto Capuzzo Dolcetta, Aleksey Generozov, Guillaume Bourdarot, Antonia Drescher, Frank Eisenhauer, Reinhard Genzel, Stefan Gillessen, Simran Joharle, Felix Mang, Thomas Ott, Diogo C. Ribeiro, Sebastiano D. von Fellenberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a granular mass distribution, composed of stellar-mass black holes, affects the orbit of star S2 near the Galactic center, revealing potential observable deviations with upcoming measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a fast dynamical simulation method to study the impact of mass granularity on S2's orbit, highlighting effects previously unaccounted for in smooth potential models.
Findings
Granularity causes significant orbital deviations and precession.
Upcoming 2026 observations could detect these effects.
Mass distribution granularity must be considered in orbital modeling.
Abstract
The orbit of the S2 star around Sagittarius A* provides a unique opportunity to test general relativity and study dynamical processes near a supermassive black hole. Observations have shown that the orbit of S2 is consistent with a Schwarzschild orbit at a 10 confidence level, constraining the amount of extended mass within its orbit to less than 1200 M, under the assumption of a smooth, spherically symmetric mass distribution. In this work we investigate the effects on the S2 orbit of granularity in the mass distribution, assuming it consists of a cluster of equal-mass objects surrounding Sagittarius A*. Using a fast dynamical approach validated by full N-body simulations, we perform a large set of simulations of the motion of S2 with different realizations of the cluster objects distribution. We find that granularity can induce significant deviations from the orbit in…
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.
