Abstract We use 23 yr of astrometric and radial velocity data on the orbit of the star S0-2 to constrain a hypothetical intermediate-mass black hole orbiting the massive black hole Sgr A* at the Galactic center. The data place upper limits on variations of the orientation of the stellar orbit at levels between 0.°02 and 0.°07 per year. We use a combination of analytic estimates and full numerical integrations of the orbit of S0-2 in the presence of a black hole binary. For a companion intermediate-mass black hole outside the orbit of S0-2 (1020 au), we find that a companion black hole with massmcbetween 103and 105M⊙is excluded, with a boundary behaving as . For a companion withac< 1020 au, a black hole with mass between 103and 105M⊙is excluded, with . These bounds arise from quadrupolar perturbations of the orbit of S0-2. Significantly stronger bounds on an inner companion arise from the fact that the location of S0-2 is measured relative to the bright emission of Sgr A* and that separation is perturbed by the “wobble” of Sgr A* about the center of mass between it and the companion. The result is a set of bounds as small as 400M⊙at 200 au; the numerical simulations suggest a bound from these effects varying as . We compare and contrast our results with those from a recent analysis by the GRAVITY collaboration.
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This content will become publicly available on July 2, 2026
On the Formation of S stars from a Recent Massive Black Hole Merger in the Galactic Center
Abstract The Galactic center hosts a rotating disk of young stars between 0.05 and 0.5 pc of Sgr A*. The “S stars” at a distance <0.04 pc, however, are on eccentric orbits with nearly isotropically distributed inclinations. The dynamical origin of the S-star cluster has remained a theoretical challenge. Using a series ofN-body simulations, we show that a recent massive black hole merger with Sgr A* can self-consistently produce many of the orbital properties of the Galactic nuclear star cluster within 0.5 pc. A black hole merger results in a gravitational-wave recoil kick, which causes the surrounding cluster to form an apse-aligned eccentric disk. We show that stars near the inner edge of an eccentric disk migrate inward and are driven to high eccentricities and inclinations due to secular torques similar to the eccentric Kozai–Lidov mechanism. In our fiducial model, starting with a thin eccentric disk withe= 0.3, the initially unoccupied region within 0.04 pc is populated with high-eccentricity, high-inclination S stars within a few Myr. This formation channel requires a black hole of mass to have merged with Sgr A* within the last 10 Myr.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2206428
- PAR ID:
- 10646812
- Publisher / Repository:
- The Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Volume:
- 987
- Issue:
- 2
- ISSN:
- 2041-8205
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- L27
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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