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Published May 26, 2017 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Testing General Relativity with Stellar Orbits around the Supermassive Black Hole in Our Galactic Center

Abstract

We demonstrate that short-period stars orbiting around the supermassive black hole in our Galactic center can successfully be used to probe the gravitational theory in a strong regime. We use 19 years of observations of the two best measured short-period stars orbiting our Galactic center to constrain a hypothetical fifth force that arises in various scenarios motivated by the development of a unification theory or in some models of dark matter and dark energy. No deviation from general relativity is reported and the fifth force strength is restricted to an upper 95% confidence limit of |α|<0.016 at a length scale of λ=150 astronomical units. We also derive a 95% confidence upper limit on a linear drift of the argument of periastron of the short-period star S0-2 of |ω_(S0-2)|<1.6×10^(-3)  rad/yr, which can be used to constrain various gravitational and astrophysical theories. This analysis provides the first fully self-consistent test of the gravitational theory using orbital dynamic in a strong gravitational regime, that of a supermassive black hole. A sensitivity analysis for future measurements is also presented.

Additional Information

© 2017 American Physical Society. Received 22 December 2016; revised manuscript received 14 March 2017; published 25 May 2017. A. H. thanks W. Folkner and P. Wolf for the interesting discussions. Support for this work was provided by NSF Grant No. AST-1412615, the Heising-Simon Foundation, the Levine-Leichtman Family Foundation, the Galactic Center Board of Advisors, and Janet Marott for her support of the research on S0-38 through the Galactic Center Stellar Patron Program.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevLett.118.211101.pdf

Supplemental Material - supplemental.pdf

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