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A Stellar Wind Origin for the G2 Cloud: Three-Dimensional Numerical Simulations

Abstract

We present 3D, adaptive mesh refinement simulations of G2, a cloud of gas moving in a highly eccentric orbit towards the galactic center. We assume that G2 originates from a stellar wind interacting with the environment of the Sgr A* black hole. The stellar wind forms a cometary bubble which becomes increasingly elongated as the star approaches periastron. A few months after periastron passage, streams of material begin to accrete on the central black hole with accretion rates M˙108\dot{M} \sim 10^{-8} M_\odot yr1^{-1}. Predicted Brγ\gamma emission maps and position-velocity diagrams show an elongated emission resembling recent observations of G2. A large increase in luminosity is predicted by the emission coming from the shocked wind region during periastron passage. The observations, showing a constant Brγ\gamma luminosity, remain puzzling, and are explained here assuming that the emission is dominated by the free-wind region. The observed Brγ\gamma luminosity (8×1030\sim 8 \times 10^{30} erg s1^{-1}) is reproduced by a model with a vw=50v_w=50 km s1^{-1} wind velocity and a 10710^{-7} M_\odot yr1^{-1} mass loss rate if the emission comes from the shocked wind. A faster and less dense wind reproduces the Brγ\gamma luminosity if the emission comes from the inner, free wind region. The extended cometary wind bubble, largely destroyed by the tidal interaction with the black hole, reforms a few years after periastron passage. As a result, the Brγ\gamma emission is more compact after periastron passage.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Letter

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