Full-polarization millimeter wavelength variability of Sagittarius A* during the 2018 EHT campaign
Ezequiel Albentosa-Ruiz, Jasmin E. Washington, Nicola Marchili, Iván Martí-Vidal, Ciriaco Goddi + 270 more
TLDR
Sgr A* shows distinct millimeter-wave polarization and intensity variability, challenging standard accretion models with new insights from an X-ray flare.
Key contributions
- Investigated Sgr A*'s millimeter-wave variability and polarization during the 2018 EHT campaign using ALMA.
- Found low total intensity variability (<10%) but significantly higher linear (~30%) and circular (~50%) polarization variability.
- Observed red-noise variability and distinct timescales for polarized vs. total intensity, suggesting separate emission regions.
- A specific X-ray flare showed near-simultaneous X-ray and millimeter peaks, challenging standard delayed flare models.
Why it matters
This paper provides crucial observational data on Sgr A*'s millimeter-wave behavior, especially its polarization and response to X-ray flares. The findings challenge existing accretion models by suggesting continuous energy injection rather than delayed cooling. This refines our understanding of plasma processes near supermassive black holes.
Original Abstract
Sagittarius A* (Srg A*), the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, provides a unique laboratory to study accretion dynamics and plasma processes near the event horizon. We investigated the variability and polarization properties of Srg A* using ALMA observations during the 2018 Event Horizon Telescope campaign. We analyzed high-cadence full-polarization light curves from ALMA at millimeter wavelengths, performed time-series analysis, and investigated the temporal behavior during an X-ray flare observed by Chandra on 2018 April 24. The variability characteristics are compared with expectations from standard accretion flow models. We find low variability in total intensity ($σ/μ< 10\%$), but significantly higher variability in linear and circular polarization (~ 30% and ~ 50%, respectively). A time-series analysis reveals red-noise variability, with power spectral densities between -2 and -3 across all Stokes parameters. Polarized intensity shows stable intra-day timescales, while total intensity exhibits more variable timescales, suggesting distinct emission regions, with polarization likely arising from a coherent structure. On April 24, a statistically significant inter-band delay in polarized intensity coincides with a near-simultaneous X-ray and millimeter peak that deviates from the typical delayed flare scenario. This event also features enhanced millimeter variability and coherent polarization loop evolution. The observed simultaneity challenges standard models of transient synchrotron emission with cooling delays, favoring instead a scenario of continuous energy injection in an optically thin region. Our results offer new constraints on the physical mechanisms driving variability in Srg A*, and provide key observational input for refining theoretical models of accretion and plasma behavior in the vicinity of supermassive black holes.
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