Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
1998-06-14
ApJ, 511:750-760, 1999
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
27 pages, including 1 table and 8 EPS figures; submitted to ApJ; uses aasms4.sty
Scientific paper
10.1086/306714
The evidence for the presence of a concentration of dark matter at the Galactic center is now very compelling. There is no question that the stellar and gas kinematics within 0.01 pc is dominated by under-luminous matter in the form of either a massive black hole, a highly condensed distribution of stellar remnants, or a more exotic source of gravity. The unique, compact radio source Sgr A* appears to be coincident with the center of this region, but its size (less than 3x10^14 cm at lambda=1.35cm) is still significantly smaller than the current limiting volume enclosing this mass. Sgr A* may be the black hole, if the dark matter distribution is point-like. If not, we are left with a puzzle regarding its nature, and a question of why this source should be so unique and lie only at the Galactic center. Here, we examine an alternative to the black hole paradigm---that the gravitating matter is a condensed cluster of stellar remnants---and study the properties of the Galactic center wind flowing through this region. Some of this gas is trapped in the cluster potential, and we study in detail whether this hot, magnetized gas is in the proper physical state to produce Sgr A*'s spectrum. We find that at least for the Galactic center environment, the temperature of the trapped gas never attains the value required for significant GHz emission. In addition, continuum (mostly bremsstrahlung) emission at higher frequencies is below the current measurements and upper limits for this source. We conclude that the cluster potential is too shallow for the trapped Galactic center wind to account for Sgr A*'s spectrum, which instead appears to be produced only within an environment that has a steep-gradient potential like that generated by a black hole.
Coker Robert
Melia Fulvio
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