Planck-cmb-allsky

High-Precision Stellar Radial Velocities in the Galactic Center

December 2003 • 2003ApJ...599.1139F

Authors • Figer, Donald F. • Gilmore, Diane • Kim, Sungsoo S. • Morris, Mark • Becklin, E. E. • McLean, Ian S. • Gilbert, Andrea M. • Graham, James R. • Larkin, James E. • Levenson, N. A. • Teplitz, Harry I.

Abstract • We present radial velocities for 85 cool stars projected onto the central parsec of the Galaxy. The majority of these velocities have relative errors of ~1 km s-1, or a factor of ~30-100 smaller than those previously obtained with proper-motion or other radial velocity measurements for a similar stellar sample. The error in a typical individual stellar velocity, including all sources of uncertainty, is 1.7 km s-1. Two similar data sets were obtained 1 month apart, and the total error in the relative velocities is 0.80 km s-1 in the case where an object is common to both data sets. The data are used to characterize the velocity distribution of the old population in the Galactic center. We find that the stars have a Gaussian velocity distribution with a mean heliocentric velocity of -10.1+/-11.0 km s-1 (blueshifted) and a standard deviation of 100.9+/-7.7 km s-1 the mean velocity of the sample is consistent with no bulk line-of-sight motion with respect to the local standard of rest. At the 1 σ level, the data are consistent with a symmetric velocity distribution about any arbitrary axis in the plane of the sky. We find evidence for a flattening in the distribution of late-type stars within a radius of ~0.4 pc and infer a volume density distribution of r-1/4 in this region. Finally, we establish a first epoch of radial velocity measurements that can be compared with subsequent epochs to measure small accelerations (1 km s-1 yr-1), corresponding to the magnitude expected over a time span of several years for stars nearest to Sgr A*.

Data presented herein were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation.

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Harry_teplitz

Harry Teplitz

Senior Scientist