Multiwavelength Observations of Sgr A*. II. 2019 July 21 and 26

Abstract

We report on the final two days of a multiwavelength campaign of Sgr A* observing in the radio, submillimeter, infrared, and X-ray bands in July 2019. Sgr A* was remarkably active, showing multiple flaring events across the electromagnetic spectrum. We detect a transient 35\sim35-minute periodicity feature in Spitzer Space Telescope light curves on 21 July 2019. Time-delayed emission was detected in ALMA light curves, suggesting a hotspot within the accretion flow on a stable orbit. On the same night, we observe a decreased flux in the submillimeter light curve following an X-ray flare detected by the Chandra X-ray Observatory and model the feature with an adiabatically expanding synchrotron hotspot occulting the accretion flow. The event is produced by a plasma 0.55 RS0.55~R_{\text{S}} in radius with an electron spectrum p=2.84p=2.84. It is threaded by a 130\sim130 Gauss magnetic field and expands at 0.6%0.6\% the speed of light. Finally, we reveal an unambiguous flare in the infrared, submillimeter, and radio, demonstrating that the variable emission is intrinsically linked. We jointly fit the radio and submillimeter light curves using an adiabatically expanding synchrotron hotspot and find it is produced by a plasma with an electron spectrum p=0.59p=0.59, 187187 Gauss magnetic field, and radius 0.47 RS0.47~R_{\text{S}} that expands at 0.029c0.029c. In both cases, the uncertainty in the appropriate lower and upper electron energy bounds may inflate the derived equipartition field strengths by a factor of 2 or more. Our results confirm that both synchrotron- and adiabatic-cooling processes are involved in the variable emission's evolution at submillimeter and infrared wavelengths.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, accepted to The Astrophysical Journal. Comments welcome! Paper I can be found here: arXiv:2107.0968

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