2General Relativity predicts that a star passing close to a supermassive black hole should exhibit a relativistic redshift. We test this using observations of the Galactic center star S0-2. We combine existing spectroscopic and astrometric measurements from 1995-2017, which cover S0-2's 16-year orbit, with measurements in 2018 March to September which cover three events during its closest approach to the black hole. We detect the combination of special relativistic-and gravitational-redshift, quantified using a redshift parameter, Υ. Our result, Υ = 0.88 ± 0.17, is consistent with General Relativity (Υ = 1) and excludes a Newtonian model (Υ = 0 ) with a statistical significance of 5 σ.General Relativity (GR) has been thoroughly tested in weak gravitational fields in the Solar System (1), with binary pulsars (2) and with measurements of gravitational waves from stellarmass black-hole binaries (3,4). Observations of short-period stars in our Galactic center (GC) (5-8) allow GR to be tested in a different regime (9): the strong field near a supermassive black hole (SMBH) (10,11). The star S0-2 (also known as S2) has a 16 year orbit around Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the SMBH at the center of the Milky Way. In 2018 May, it reached its point of closest approach, at a distance of 120 astronomical units (au) with a velocity reaching 2.7% of the speed of light. Within a 6 months interval of that date, the star also passed through its maximum (March) and minimum velocity (September) along the line-of-sight, spanning a range of 6000 km s −1 in radial velocity (RV - Fig. 1). We present observations of all three events and combine them with data from 1995-2017 ( Fig. 2).During 2018, the close proximity of S0-2 to the SMBH causes the relativistic redshift, which is the combination of the transverse Doppler shift from special relativity and the gravitational redshift from GR. This deviation from a Keplerian orbit was predicted to reach 200 km s −1 (Fig. 3) and is detectable with current telescopes. The GRAVITY collaboration (9) previously reported a similar measurement. Our measurements are complementary: i) we present a 3 complete set of independent measurements with 3 additional months of data, doubling the time baseline for the year of closest approach, and including the third turning point (RV minimum) in September 2018, ii) we use three different spectroscopic instruments in 2018, which allows us to probe the presence of instrumental biases, iii) we perform an analysis of the systematic errors that may arise from an experiment spanning over 20 years to test for bias in the result, and iv) we publicly release the stellar measurements and the posterior probability distributions.We use a total of 45 astrometric positional measurements (spanning 24 years) and 115 RVs (18 years) to fit the orbit of S0-2. Of these, 11 are new astrometric measurements of S0-2 from 2016 to 2018 and 28 are new RV measurements from 2017 and 2018 ( Fig 1). Astrometric measurements were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory using speckle imaging (a ...
Abstract. The mechanical first law (MFL) of black hole spacetimes is a geometrical relation which relates variations of mass parameter and horizon area. While it is well known that the MFL of asymptotic flat black hole is equivalent to its thermodynamical first law, however we do not know the detail of MFL of black hole spacetimes with cosmological constant which possess black hole and cosmological event horizons. Then this paper aims to formulate an MFL of the two-horizon spacetimes. For this purpose, we try to include the effects of two horizons in the MFL. To do so, we make use of the Iyer-Wald formalism and extend it to regard the mass parameter and the cosmological constant as two independent variables which make it possible to treat the two horizons on the same footing. Our extended Iyer-Wald formalism preserves the existence of conserved Noether current and its associated Noether charge, and gives the abstract form of MFL of black hole spacetimes with cosmological constant. Then, as a representative application of that formalism, we derive the MFL of Schwarzschildde Sitter (SdS) spacetime. Our MFL of SdS spacetime relates the variations of three quantities; the mass parameter, the total area of two horizons and the volume enclosed by two horizons. If our MFL is regarded as a thermodynamical first law of SdS spacetime, it offers a thermodynamically consistent description of SdS black hole evaporation process: The mass decreases while the volume and the entropy increase. In our suggestion, the generalized second law is not needed to ensure the second law of SdS thermodynamics for its evaporation process.
For the BTZ black hole in the Einstein gravity, a statistical entropy has been calculated to be equal to the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy. In this paper, the statistical entropy of the BTZ black hole in the higher curvature gravity is calculated and shown to be equal to the one derived by using the Noether charge method. This suggests that the equivalence of the geometrical and statistical entropies of the black hole is retained in the general diffeomorphism invariant theories of gravity. A relation between the cosmic censorship conjecture and the unitarity of the conformal field theory on the boundary of AdS3 is also discussed.
We calculate the quantum radiation power of black holes which are asymptotic to the Einsteinde Sitter universe at spatial and null infinities. We consider two limiting mass accretion scenarios, no accretion and significant accretion. We find that the radiation power strongly depends on not only the asymptotic condition but also the mass accretion scenario. For the no accretion case, we consider the Einstein-Straus solution, where a black hole of constant mass resides in the dust Friedmann universe. We find negative cosmological correction besides the expected redshift factor. This is given in terms of the cubic root of ratio in size of the black hole to the cosmological horizon, so that it is currently of order 10 −5 (M/10 6 M⊙) 1/3 (t/14 Gyr) −1/3 but could have been significant at the formation epoch of primordial black holes. Due to the cosmological effects, this black hole has not settled down to an equilibrium state. This cosmological correction may be interpreted in an analogy with the radiation from a moving mirror in a flat spacetime. For the significant accretion case, we consider the Sultana-Dyer solution, where a black hole tends to increase its mass in proportion to the cosmological scale factor. In this model, we find that the radiation power is apparently the same as the Hawking radiation from the Schwarzschild black hole of which mass is that of the growing mass at each moment. Hence, the energy loss rate decreases and tends to vanish as time proceeds. Consequently, the energy loss due to evaporation is insignificant compared to huge mass accretion onto the black hole. Based on this model, we propose a definition of quasi-equilibrium temperature for general conformal stationary black holes.
Direct observation of black holes is one of the grand challenges in astronomy. If there are supercompact objects which possess unstable circular orbits of photons, however, it may be difficult to distinguish them from black holes by observing photons. As a model of super-compact objects, we consider a gravastar (gravitational-vacuum-star) which was originally proposed by Mazur and Mottola. For definiteness, we adopt a spherical thin-shell model of a gravastar developed by Visser and Wiltshire, which connects interior de-Sitter geometry and exterior Schwarzschild geometry. We find that unstable circular orbits of photons can appear around the gravastar. Then, we investigate the optical images of the gravastar possessing unstable circular orbits, with assuming the optically transparent surface of it and two types of optical sources behind the gravastar: (i) an infinite optical plane and (ii) a companion star. The main feature of the image of (i) is that a bright disk and a dark thick ring surrounding the disk appear in the center of the region which would be completely dark if the compact object was not the gravastar but Schwarzschild black hole. Also in the case (ii), a small disk and arcs around the disk appear in the region which would be completely dark for the lensing image by Schwarzschild black hole. Because characteristic images appear inside the gravastar in both cases, we could tell the difference between a black hole and a gravastar with high-resolution VLBI observations near future.
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