4.7 Article

Testing the general relativistic no-hair theorems using the galactic center black hole sagittarius A*

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 674, Issue 1, Pages L25-L28

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/528847

Keywords

black hole physics; galaxy : center; relativity

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If a class of stars orbits the central black hole in our galaxy in short-period (similar to 0.1 yr), high-eccentricity (similar to 0.9) orbits, they will experience precessions of their orbital planes induced by both relativistic frame dragging and the quadrupolar gravity of the hole, at levels that could be as large as 10 mu as per year, if the black hole is rotating faster than half of its maximum rotation rate. Astrometric observations of the orbits of at least two such stars can in principle lead to a determination of the angular momentum vector of the black hole and J its quadrupole moment. This could lead to a test of the general relativistic no-hair theorems, which demand that Q(2) = -J(2)/M. Future high-precision adaptive infrared optics instruments may make such a fundamental test of the black hole paradigm possible.

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