Peering through the veil: near-infrared photometry and extinction for the Galactic nuclear star cluster

Abstract

The aims of this work are to provide accurate photometry in multiple near-infrared broadband filters, to determine the power-law index of the extinction-law toward the central parsec of the Galaxy, to provide measurements of the absolute extinction toward the Galactic center, and finally to measure the spatial variability of extinction on arcsecond scales.We use adaptive optics observations of the central parsec of the Milky Way. Absolute values for the extinction in the H, Ks, and L'-bands as well as of the power-law indices of the H to Ks and Ks to L' extinction-laws are measured based on the well-known properties of red clump stars. Extinction maps are derived based on H-Ks and Ks-L' colors. We present Ks-band photometry for ~7700 stars (H and L' photometry for a subset). From a number of recently published values we compute a mean distance of the Galactic center of R0=8.03+-0.15 kpc, which has an uncertainty of just 2%. Based on this R0 and on the RC method, we derive absolute mean extinction values toward the central parsec of the Galaxy of AH=4.48+-0.13 mag, AKs=2.54+-0.12$ mag, and AL'=1.27+-0.18 mag. We estimate values of the power-law indices of the extinction-law of alphaH-Ks=2.21+-0.24 and alphaKs-L'=1.34+-0.29. A Ks-band extinction map for the Galactic center is computed based on this extinction law and on stellar H-Ks colors. Mean extinction values in a circular region with 0.5" radius centered on Sagittarius A* are AH, SgrA*=4.35+-0.12, AKs, SgrA*=2.46+-0.03, and AL', SgrA*=1.23+-0.08.

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