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The supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*) exhibits temporal and spectral variability across the electromagnetic spectrum. However, variability at radio frequencies below ∼5 GHz for timescales shorter than a day remains largely unexplored. We investigated the variability of Sgr A* at 2.79 GHz on short timescales (1 min) to probe an under-explored regime of its emission process. Through point-source model fitting in the uv domain, we analysed the flux density variation of Sgr A* over an 8 h observation. We detect flux variation on timescales of a few tens of minutes with a modulation index of 6.11%, a mean flux density of (827 ± 0.1 stat ± 33 sys ) mJy, and a mean spectral slope of 0.08 ± 0.03. Furthermore, we measure the slope of the structure function of the observed light curve to be 0.81 ± 0.05 with a characteristic timescale of about 120 min. Our study at low radio frequencies is a critical step towards constraining the physical mechanisms that drive Sgr A*’s variable emission and its spectral energy distribution. Our study suggests that variability at centimetre and millimetre wavelengths is likely more closely related than previously thought.
Kaur et al. (Thu,) studied this question.