1,041 research outputs found
Orbits and origins of the young stars in the central parsec of the galaxy
We present new proper motions from the 10 m Keck telescopes for a puzzling population of massive, young stars located within a parsec of the supermassive black hole at the Galactic Center. Our proper motion measurements have uncertainties of only 0.07 mas yr^(â1) (3 km s^(â1) ), which is âł7 times better than previous proper motion measurements for these stars, and enables us to measure accelerations as low as 0.2 mas yr^(â2) (7 km s^(â1) yr^(â1) ). These measurements, along with stellar line-of-sight velocities from the literature, constrain the true orbit of each individual star and allow us to directly test the hypothesis that the massive stars reside in two stellar disks as has been previously proposed. Analysis of the stellar orbits reveals only one disk of young stars using a method that is capable of detecting disks containing at least 7 stars. The detected disk contains 50% (38 of 73) of the young stars, is inclined by ~115° from the plane of the sky, and is oriented at a position angle of âŒ100° East of North. The on-disk and off-disk populations have similar K-band luminosity functions and radial distributions that decrease at larger radii as â r^(â2). The disk has an out-of-the-disk velocity dispersion of 28±6 km s^(â1) , which corresponds to a half-opening angle of 7°±2° , and several candidate disk members have eccentricities greater than 0.2. Our findings suggest that the young stars may have formed in situ but in a more complex geometry than a simple thin circular disk
IRS 16SW - A New Comoving Group of Young Stars in the Central Parsec of the Milky Way
One of the most perplexing problems associated with the supermassive black
hole at the center of our Galaxy is the origin of the young stars in its close
vicinity. Using proper motion measurements and stellar number density counts
based on 9 years of diffraction-limited K(2.2 micron)-band speckle imaging at
the W. M. Keck 10-meter telescopes, we have identified a new comoving group of
stars, which we call the IRS 16SW comoving group, located 1.9" (0.08 pc, in
projection) from the central black hole. Four of the five members of this
comoving group have been spectroscopically identified as massive young stars,
specifically He I emission-line stars and OBN stars. This is the second young
comoving group within the central parsec of the Milky Way to be recognized and
is the closest, by a factor of 2, in projection to the central black hole.
These comoving groups may be the surviving cores of massive infalling star
clusters that are undergoing disruption in the strong tidal field of the
central supermassive black hole.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, accepted for ApJL, uses emulateap
Galactic Center Youth: Orbits and Origins of the Young Stars in the Central Parsec
We present new proper motions for the massive, young stars at the Galactic Center, based on 10 years of diffraction limited data from the Keck telescopes. Our proper motion measurements now have uncertainties of only 1-2 km/s and allow us to explore the origin of the young stars that reside within the sphere of inflience of the supermassive black hole whose strong tidal forces make this region inhospitable for star formation. Their presence, however, may be explained either by in situ star formation in an accretion disk or as the remnants of a massive stellar cluster which spiraled in via dynamical friction. Earlier stellar velocity vectors were used to postulate that all the young stars resided in two counter-rotating stellar disks, which is consistent with both of the above formation scenarios. Our precise proper motions allow us, for the frst time, to determine the orbital parameters of each individual star and thereby to test the hypothesis that the massive stars reside in two stellar disks. Of the 26 young stars in this study that were previously proposed to lie on the inner, clockwise disk, we find that nearly all exhibit orbital constraints consistent with such a disk. On the other hand, of the 7 stars in this study previously proposed to lie in the outer, less well-defhed counter-clockwise disk, 6 exhibit inclinations that are inconsistent with such a disk, bringing into question the existence of the outer disk. Furthermore, for stars in the inner disk that have eccentricity constraints, we find several that have lower limits to the eccentricity of more than 0.4, implying highly eccentric orbits. This stands in contrast to simple accretion disk formation scenarios which typically predict predominantly circular orbits
Testing for periodicities in near-IR light curves of Sgr A
We present the results of near-infrared (2 ÎŒm) monitoring of Sgr A*-IR with 1 minute time sampling using laser guide star adaptive optics (LGS AO) system at the Keck II
telescope. Sgr A*-IR was observed continuously for up to three hours on each of seven nights, between 2006 May and 2007 August. Sgr A*-IR is detected at all times and is continuously variable. These observations allow us to investigate Nyquist sampled periods ranging from
about 2 minutes to an hour. Of particular interest are periods of ~20 min, which corresponds to a quasi-periodic (QPO) signal claimed based upon previous near-infrared observations and interpreted as the orbit of a âhot spotâ at or near the last stable orbit of a spinning black hole.
We investigate these claims by comparing periodograms of the light curves with models for red noise and find no significant deviations that would indicate QPO activity at any time scale probed in the study. We find that the variability of Sgr A* is consistent with a model based on
correlated noise with a power spectrum having a frequency dependence of ~ f^(2.5), consistent with that observed in AGNs. Furthermore, the periodograms show power down to the minimum sampling time of 2 min, well below the period of the last stable orbit of a maximally spinning black hole, indicating that the Sgr A*-IR light curves observed in this study is unlikely to be from the Keplerian motion of a single âhot spotâ of orbiting plasma
A near-IR variability study of the Galactic black hole: a red noise source with no detected periodicity
We present the results of near-infrared (2 and 3 microns) monitoring of Sgr
A*-IR with 1 min time sampling using the natural and laser guide star adaptive
optics (LGS AO) system at the Keck II telescope. Sgr A*-IR was observed
continuously for up to three hours on each of seven nights, between 2005 July
and 2007 August. Sgr A*-IR is detected at all times and is continuously
variable, with a median observed 2 micron flux density of 0.192 mJy,
corresponding to 16.3 magnitude at K'. These observations allow us to
investigate Nyquist sampled periods ranging from about 2 minutes to an hour.
Using Monte Carlo simulations, we find that the variability of Sgr A* in this
data set is consistent with models based on correlated noise with power spectra
having frequency dependent power law slopes between 2.0 to 3.0, consistent with
those reported for AGN light curves. Of particular interest are periods of ~20
min, corresponding to a quasi-periodic signal claimed based upon previous
near-infrared observations and interpreted as the orbit of a 'hot spot' at or
near the last stable orbit of a spinning black hole. We find no significant
periodicity at any time scale probed in these new observations for periodic
signals. This study is sensitive to periodic signals with amplitudes greater
than 20% of the maximum amplitude of the underlying red noise component for
light curves with duration greater than ~2 hours at a 98% confidence limit.Comment: 37 pages, 2 tables, 17 figures, accepted by Ap
A Constant Spectral Index for Sagittarius A* During Infrared/X-ray Intensity Variations
We report the first time-series of broadband infrared (IR) color measurements
of Sgr A*, the variable emission source associated with the supermassive black
hole at the Galactic Center. Using the laser and natural guide star AO systems
on the Keck II telescope, we imaged Sgr A* in multiple near-infrared broadband
filters with a typical cycle time of ~3 min during 4 observing runs
(2005-2006), two of which were simultaneous with Chandra X-ray measurements. In
spite of the large range of dereddened flux densities for Sgr A* (2-30 mJy),
all of our near-IR measurements are consistent with a constant spectral index
of alpha = -0.6+-0.2. Furthermore, this value is consistent with the spectral
indices observed at X-ray wavelengths during nearly all outbursts; which is
consistent with the synchrotron self-Compton model for the production of the
X-ray emission. During the coordinated observations, one IR outburst occurs <36
min after a possibly associated X-ray outburst, while several similar IR
outbursts show no elevated X-ray emission. A variable X-ray to IR ratio and
constant infrared spectral index challenge the notion that the IR and X-ray
emission are connected to the same electrons. We, therefore, posit that the
population of electrons responsible for both the IR and X-ray emission are
generated by an acceleration mechanism that leaves the bulk of the electron
energy distribution responsible for the IR emission unchanged, but has a
variable high-energy cutoff. Occasionally a tail of electrons >1 GeV is
generated, and it is this high-energy tail that gives rise to the X-ray
outbursts. One possible explanation for this type of variation is from the
turbulence induced by a magnetorotational instability, in which the outer scale
length of the turbulence varies and changes the high-energy cutoff.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures (color), Accepted for publication in ApJ.
Resolution (Fig 1&2) downgraded for astro-ph. For full resolution, see
http://casa.colorado.edu/~hornstei/sgracolor.pd
The First Measurement of Spectral Lines in a Short-Period Star Bound to the Galaxy's Central Black Hole: A Paradox of Youth
We have obtained the first detection of spectral absorption lines in one of
the high-velocity stars in the vicinity of the Galaxy's central supermassive
black hole. Both Brgamma (2.1661 micron) and He I (2.1126 micron) are seen in
absorption in S0-2 with equivalent widths (2.8+-0.3 Ang & 1.7+-0.4 Ang) and an
inferred stellar rotational velocity (220+-40 km/s) that are consistent with
that of an O8-B0 dwarf, which suggests that it is a massive (~15 Msun), young
(<10 Myr) main sequence star. This presents a major challenge to star formation
theories, given the strong tidal forces that prevail over all distances reached
by S0-2 in its current orbit (130 - 1900 AU) and the difficulty in migrating
this star inward during its lifetime from further out where tidal forces should
no longer preclude star formation. The radial velocity measurements (-510+-40
km/s) and our reported proper motions for S0-2 strongly constrain its orbit,
providing a direct measure of the black hole mass of 4.1(+-0.6)x10^6(Ro/8kpc)^3
Msun. The Keplerian orbit parameters have uncertainities that are reduced by a
factor of 2-3 compared to previously reported values and include, for the first
time, an independent solution for the dynamical center; this location, while
consistent with the nominal infrared position of Sgr A*, is localized to a
factor of 5 more precisely (+-2 milli-arcsec). Furthermore, the ambiguity in
the inclination of the orbit is resolved with the addition of the radial
velocity measurement, indicating that the star is behind the black hole at the
time of closest approach and counter-revolving against the Galaxy. With further
radial velocity measurements in the next few years, the orbit of S0-2 will
provide the most robust estimate of the distance to the Galactic Center.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, Accepted for Publication in ApJ Letter
Stellar Orbits Around the Galactic Center Black Hole
We present new proper motion measurements and simultaneous orbital solutions
for three newly identified (S0-16, S0-19, and S0-20) and four previously known
(S0-1, S0-2, S0-4, and S0-5) stars at the Galactic Center. This analysis
pinpoints the Galaxy's central dark mass to within +-1 milli-arcsec and, for
the first time from orbital dynamics, limits its proper motion to 1.5+-0.5
mas/y, which is consistent with our derivation of the position of Sgr A* in the
infrared reference frame (+-10 mas). The estimated central dark mass from
orbital motions is 3.7 (+-0.2) x 10^6 (Ro/8kpc)^3 Mo; this is a more direct
measure of mass than those obtained from velocity dispersion measurements,
which are as much as a factor of two smaller. The smallest closest approach is
achieved by S0-16, which confines the mass to within a radius of a mere 45 AU
and increases the inferred dark mass density by four orders of magnitude
compared to earlier analyses based on velocity and acceleration vectors, making
the Milky Way the strongest existing case by far for a supermassive black hole
at the center of any normal type galaxy. The stellar orbital properties suggest
that the distributions of eccentricities and angular momentum vector and
apoapse directions are consistent with those of an isotropic system. Therefore
many of the mechanisms proposed for the formation of young stars in the
vicinity of a supermassive black hole, such as formation from a pre-existing
disk, are unlikely solutions for the Sgr A* cluster stars. Unfortunately, all
existing alternative theories are also somewhat problematic. Understanding the
apparent youth of stars in the Sgr A* cluster, as well as the more distant He I
emission line stars, has now become one of the major outstanding issues in the
study of the Galactic Center.Comment: Abridged abstract, 38 pages, 5 figures, ApJ accepte
Circulating miR-181 is a prognostic biomarker for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a relentless neurodegenerative disease of the human motor neuron system, where variability in progression rate limits clinical trial efficacy. Therefore, better prognostication will facilitate therapeutic progress. In this study, we investigated the potential of plasma cell-free microRNAs (miRNAs) as ALS prognostication biomarkers in 252 patients with detailed clinical phenotyping. First, we identified, in a longitudinal cohort, miRNAs whose plasma levels remain stable over the course of disease. Next, we showed that high levels of miR-181, a miRNA enriched in neurons, predicts aâgreater than two-fold risk of death in independent discovery and replication cohorts (126 and 122 patients, respectively). miR-181 performance is similar to neurofilament light chain (NfL), and when combined together, miR-181 + NfL establish a novel RNAâprotein biomarker pair with superior prognostication capacity. Therefore, plasma miR-181 alone and a novel miRNAâprotein biomarker approach, based on miR-181 + NfL, boost precision of patient stratification. miR-181-based ALS biomarkers encourage additional validation and might enhance the power of clinical trials
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