Unveiling a Supermassive Black Hole at the Center of Our Galaxy

Andrea Ghez
University of California at Los Angeles


Abstract
The proximity of our Galaxy's center presents an opportunity to build a case for a supermassive black hole and to study the black hole's environment and its effects thereon with much higher spatial resolution than can be brought to bear on any other galaxy. After almost a decade of astrometry from diffraction- limited speckle imaging at the W.M. Keck 10m telescope, we have moved the case for a supermassive black hole at the galactic center from a possibility to a certainty; this is based on our recent ability to determine the orbits of individual stars, which confines the central dark mass of 3.7 million times the mass of the sun to within 45 AU (1 AU = the Earth-Sun distance), or equivalently, 600 Schwartzschild radii. With the advent of adaptive optics, which have significantly expanded out studies of the Galaxy's central black hole through the addition of diffraction-limited spectroscopy and deep imaging at wavelengths other than 2.2 microns. Spectroscopy has revealed that the stars orbiting in such close proximity are apparently massive and young; the origin of the stars is difficut to explain, given the strong tidal forces, and may provide key insight into the growth of the central black hole. Thermal infrared imaging (3.8 microns) has led to the direct detection of plasma associated with the black hole. This source is variable on timescales as short as 40 min, implying that the emission arises quite close to the black hole, within 5 AU, or 80 Schwartzschild radii. This provides a new, constantly accessible window into the physical conditions of the plasma in close proximity to the central black hole.
















25 March 2005
Astronomy Program · The University of Texas at Austin · Austin, Texas 78712
prospective student inquiries: studentinfo@astro.as.utexas.edu
site comments: www@www.as.utexas.edu