On the Nature of the Compact Dark Mass at the Galactic Center

  • Broderick A
  • Narayan R
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Abstract

We consider a model in which Sgr A*, the 3.5x10^6 M_sun supermassive black hole candidate at the Galactic Center, is a compact object with a surface. Given the very low quiescent luminosity of Sgr A* in the near infrared, the existence of a hard surface, even in the limit in which the radius approaches the horizon, places severe constraints upon the steady mass accretion rate in the source, requiring dM/dt < 10^-12 M_sun/yr. This limit is well below the minimum accretion rate needed to power the observed submillimeter luminosity of Sgr A*. We thus argue that Sgr A* does not have a surface, i.e., it must have an event horizon. The argument could be made more restrictive by an order of magnitude with microarcsecond resolution imaging, e.g., with submillimeter VLBI.

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Broderick, A. E., & Narayan, R. (2006). On the Nature of the Compact Dark Mass at the Galactic Center. The Astrophysical Journal, 638(1), L21–L24. https://doi.org/10.1086/500930

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