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Creators/Authors contains: "Campbell, Randall"

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  1. We report on our plans to upgrade the detector systems in the 2022–2024 time frame for three of the workhorse instruments (NIRC2, DEIMOS, and NIRES) operated by the W. M. Keck Observatory. The upgrades are done in collaboration with Observatory partner institutions and other Maunakea observatories. The main motivating factors behind these upgrades are to tackle obsolescence of hardware and software components, to boost observing efficiency, to enhance the instrument throughput, and to add new observing functionality. 
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  2. Abstract We present two decades of new high-angular-resolution near-infrared data from the W. M. Keck Observatory that reveal extreme evolution in X7, an elongated dust and gas feature, presently located half an arcsecond from the Galactic Center supermassive black hole. With both spectro-imaging observations of Br-γline emission andLp(3.8μm) imaging data, we provide the first estimate of its orbital parameters and quantitative characterization of the evolution of its morphology and mass. We find that the leading edge of X7 appears to be on a mildly eccentric (e∼ 0.3), relatively short-period (170 yr) orbit and is headed toward periapse passage, estimated to occur in ∼2036. Furthermore, our kinematic measurements rule out the earlier suggestion that X7 is associated with the stellar source S0-73 or with any other point source that has overlapped with X7 during our monitoring period. Over the course of our observations, X7 has (1) become more elongated, with a current length-to-width ratio of 9, (2) maintained a very consistent long-axis orientation (position angle of 50°), (3) inverted its radial velocity differential from tip to tail from −50 to +80 km s−1, and (4) sustained its total brightness (12.8Lpmagnitudes at the leading edge) and color temperature (425 K), which suggest a constant mass of ∼50MEarth. We present a simple model showing that these results are compatible with the expected effect of tidal forces exerted on it by the central black hole, and we propose that X7 is the gas and dust recently ejected from a grazing collision in a binary system. 
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  4. Vernet, Joël R; Bryant, Julia J; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)
    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 22, 2025