A spectroscopic map of the Galactic centre: Integrated light and dynamical modelling
A. Feldmeier-Krause, T. I. Maindl, G. van den Ven, S. Thater, P. Jethwa, I. Breda

TL;DR
This study applies triaxial orbit-based dynamical modelling to the Milky Way's Galactic centre using spectroscopic maps, recovering the black hole mass and characterizing stellar orbit distributions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility of using integrated light and dynamical modelling on the Galactic centre, providing new insights into its mass distribution and orbital structure.
Findings
Recovered the mass of Sgr A* accurately.
Stellar structures are mildly triaxial and near oblate.
Inner region dominated by warm and hot orbits.
Abstract
The centre of the Milky Way is occupied by a nuclear star cluster, which contains the supermassive black hole Sgr A*. The cluster is embedded in the larger surrounding nuclear stellar disc. These three components dominate the mass budget of the Galactic centre at different radial scales. The mass distribution of the Galactic centre has been studied extensively using observations of individual bright stars and various dynamical modelling approaches. The situation differs for external galaxies, where observations are often limited to the integrated line-of-sight kinematics. For such systems, triaxial orbit-based dynamical modelling has become a standard method to derive mass distributions and stellar orbit distributions. We aim to apply and test this method on the Galactic centre. We extract stellar line-of-sight kinematic maps of the inner ~3 pc x 66 pc region of the Galactic centre. We…
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