Implication of spin constraints by the Event Horizon Telescope on stellar orbits in the Galactic Center

Abstract

The center of the Milky Way hosts the closest supermassive black hole, SgrA*. Decades of near-infrared observations of our Galactic Center have shown the presence of a small population of stars (the so called S-star cluster) orbiting SgrA*, which were recently reported to be arranged in two orthogonal disks. In this case, the timescale for Lense-Thirring precession of S-stars should be longer than their age, implying a low spin for SgrA*. In contrast, the recent results by the Event Horizon Telescope favor a highly-spinning SgrA*, which seem to suggest that the S-stars could not be arranged in disks. Alternatively, the spin of SgrA* must be small, suggesting that the models for its observed image are incomplete.

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