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We report the detection and analysis of a radio flare observed on 17 April 2014 from Sgr A* at $9$ GHz using the VLA in its A-array configuration. This is the first reported simultaneous radio observation of Sgr A* across $16$ frequency windows between $8$ and $10$ GHz. We cross correlate the lowest and highest spectral windows centered at $8.0$ and $9.9$ GHz, respectively, and find the $8.0$ GHz light curve lagging $18.37^{+2.17}_{-2.18}$ minutes behind the $9.9$ GHz light curve. This is the first time lag found in Sgr A*s light curve across a narrow radio frequency bandwidth. We separate the quiescent and flaring components of Sgr A* via flux offsets at each spectral window. The emission is consistent with an adiabatically-expanding synchrotron plasma, which we fit to the light curves to characterize the two components. The flaring emission has an equipartition magnetic field strength of $2.2$ Gauss, size of $14$ Schwarzschild radii, average speed of $12000$ km s$^{-1}$, and electron energy spectrum index ($N(E)propto E^{-p}$), $p = 0.18$. The peak flare flux at $10$ GHz is approximately $25$% of the quiescent emission. This flare is abnormal as the inferred magnetic field strength and size are typically about $10$ Gauss and few Schwarzschild radii. The properties of this flare are consistent with a transient warm spot in the accretion flow at a distance of $10$-$100$ Schwarzschild radii from Sgr A*. Our analysis allows for independent characterization of the variable and quiescent components, which is significant for studying temporal variations in these components.
We performed the observation of the flux densities of Sgr A* at 90 and 102 GHz on 6 April 2005 using the Nobeyama Millimeter Array in order to detect the time lag between these frequencies. We constructed light curves covering a few hour with 1 min b
We report linearly polarized continuum emission properties of Sgr A* at $sim$492 GHz, based on the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) observations. We used the observations of the likely unpolarized continuum emission of Titan, and the observation
We performed the observation of the flux densities of SgrA* at 90 and 102GHz in order to detect the time lag between these frequencies using the Nobeyama Millimeter Array, which was previously reported at lower frequencies. We detected a radio flare
We present 44 and 226 GHz observations of the Galactic center within 20$$ of Sgr A*. Millimeter continuum emission at 226 GHz is detected from eight stars that have previously been identified at near-IR and radio wavelengths. We also detect a 5.8 mJy
Daily X-ray flaring represents an enigmatic phenomenon of Sgr A$^{star}$ --- the supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy. We report initial results from a systematic X-ray study of this phenomenon, based on extensive {it Chandra} observat