Photometric Constraints on Intermediate-mass Black Holes in the Galactic Centre
Tamojeet Roychowdhury, Sebastiano D. von Fellenberg, Joseph M. Michail, S. P. Willner, Nicole M. Ford, Zach Sumners, Sophia Sanchez-Maes, Tuan Do, Macarena Garcia Marin, Sera Markoff, Giovanni G. Fazio, Daryl Haggard, Joseph L. Hora, Bart Ripperda, Nadeen B. Sabha

TL;DR
Using JWST/MIRI observations, the study places stringent photometric limits on the existence of intermediate-mass black holes near the Galactic Centre, especially around IRS 13E, by analyzing variability and luminosity constraints.
Contribution
This work demonstrates that mid-infrared photometric variability measurements can effectively constrain the presence and properties of accreting intermediate-mass black holes in galactic nuclei.
Findings
No variable emission detected from IRS 13E consistent with an IMBH.
Rules out IMBHs with mass > 10^3 M_sun accreting at > 10^-6 Eddington rate near IRS 13E.
Limits IMBH presence within 6 arcseconds to less than ~2000 M_sun.
Abstract
JWST/MIRI observations can place photometric limits on the presence of an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) near the Galactic Centre. The stellar complex IRS 13E, a co-moving conglomerate of young and massive stars, is a prime location to study because it has been speculated to be bound by an IMBH. Assuming a standard radiatively inefficient accretion flow (RIAF) and a minimum fractional variability of 10% of intrinsic luminosity, the wavelength of peak emission in the spectral energy distribution for an IMBH would lie in the mid-infrared ( 5-25 m), and variability would be detectable in MIRI time-series observations. Monitoring fails to detect such variable emission (other than from Sgr A*) in and around the IRS 13E complex, and upper limits on a putative IMBH's intrinsic variability on timescales of minutes to about 1 hour are 1 mJy at 12 m and 2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
