111 research outputs found
High Spectral and Spatial Resolution Observations of Shocked Molecular Hydrogen at the Galactic Center
The presence of OH (1720 MHz) masers, and the absence of counterparts at
1665/1667 MHz has proved to be a clear diagnostic of shocked molecular gas
associated with Galactic supernova remnants. This suggests that shocked
molecular gas should be associated with the OH (1720 MHz) masers that have been
detected in the circumnuclear disk (CND) and Sgr A East at the Galactic center.
In order to test this hypothesis, we observed the H 1--0 S(1) and Br
lines using NICMOS on the HST and UNSWIRF on the AAT, near the regions
where OH (1720 MHz) masers are detected in the CND and Sgr A East. We present
the distribution of H in the North and South lobes of the CND and in Sgr A
East. H emission accompanies almost all of the maser spots detected at the
Galactic center. In particular, we find a striking filamentary structure near
the Northwest of the CND and evidence that shocked molecular gas is associated
with the 70 \kms molecular cloud at the Galactic center. We argue that the
emission from the CND could arise in gas heated by the dissipation of the
random motion of clumps by collisions or the dissipation of turbulence in a
more homogeneous medium. In addition, highly red-shifted gas of up to 140 \kms\
close to the eastern edge of the Sgr A East shell is detected. These
observations combined with OH (1720 MHz) results suggest that the H gas is
shocked and accelerated by the expansion of Sgr A East into the 50 and the 70
\kms cloud and into the lobes of the CND.Comment: 31 pages plus 14 figures, ApJ (in press
Extinction toward the Compact HII Regions G-0.02-0.07
The four HII regions in the Sgr A East complex: A, B, C, and D, represent
evidence of recent massive star formation in the central ten parsecs. Using
Paschen-alpha images taken with HST and 8.4 GHz VLA data, we construct an
extinction map of A-D, and briefly discuss their morphology and location.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. To be published in the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific Conference Series Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop 2009,
Shangha
The mid-infrared colors of the interstellar medium and extended sources at the Galactic center
A mid-infrared (3.6â8 ÎŒm) survey of the Galactic center has been carried out with the IRAC instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. This survey covers the central 2Âș x 1.4Âș (~280 x 200 pc) of the Galaxy. At 3.6 and 4.5 ÎŒm the emission is dominated by stellar sources, the fainter ones merging into an unresolved background. At 5.8 and 8 ÎŒm the stellar sources are fainter, and large-scale diffuse emission from the ISM of the Galaxy's central molecular zone becomes prominent. The survey reveals that the 8-to-5.8 ÎŒm color of the ISM emission is highly uniform across the surveyed region. This uniform color is consistent with a flat extinction law and emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Models indicate that this broadband color should not be expected to change if the incident radiation field heating the dust and PAHs is ~10^4 times that of the solar neighborhood. Other regions of very red emission indicate cases where thick dust clouds obscure deeply embedded objects or very early stages of star formation
HST Palpha Survey of the Galactic Center -- Searching the missing young stellar populations within the Galactic Center
We present preliminary results of our \hst Pa survey of the Galactic
Center (\gc), which maps the central 0.650.25 degrees around Sgr A*.
This survey provides us with a more complete inventory of massive stars within
the \gc, compared to previous observations. We find 157 Pa emitting
sources, which are evolved massive stars. Half of them are located outside of
three young massive star clusters near Sgr A*. The loosely spatial distribution
of these field sources suggests that they are within less massive star
clusters/groups, compared to the three massive ones. Our Pa mosaic not
only resolves previously well-known large-scale filaments into fine structures,
but also reveals many new extended objects, such as bow shocks and H II
regions. In particular, we find two regions with large-scale Pa diffuse
emission and tens of Pa emitting sources in the negative Galactic
longitude suggesting recent star formation activities, which were not known
previously. Furthermore, in our survey, we detect 0.6 million stars, most
of which are red giants or AGB stars. Comparisons of the magnitude distribution
in 1.90 m and those from the stellar evolutionary tracks with different
star formation histories suggest an episode of star formation process about 350
Myr ago in the \gc .Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop
2009, Shangha
HST Paschen alpha and 1.9 micron imaging of Sgr A West
We present HST/NICMOS images at 0.2" resolution of the HI Paschen Alpha (PaA)
emission line in a 70" x 90" region of the Galactic center centered on the
non-thermal radio source Sgr A*. The majority of the emission arises from
ionized gas in the mini-spiral in the central parsec. PaA emission is also seen
from 26 stellar sources, presumably early-type stars with mass-loss winds. The
new data reveal significant small-scale structure (<1"~0.04pc) in the ionized
gas of the mini-spiral; low surface brightness emission features are also seen
for the first time. Extinction, estimated from the ratio of observed PaA
emission to 6-cm continuum emission, varies from 20 to 50 mag with a median
Av=31.1 mag, in excellent agreement with earlier estimates for the stellar
sources and indepedent measurements derived using H92alpha recombination line
data. Large increases in extinction are seen along the periphery of the ionized
gas, suggesting that the ionized gas is partially extincted by dust in the
molecular clouds at the outside of the ionized regions. The small-scale,
filamentary structures in the ionized gas have a free thermal expansion time of
only ~ 3000 yrs; either magnetic fields or mass-loss winds from the hot
emission line stars may contain the ionized filaments. For both the ionized gas
and the stellar continuum, the centroids of the emission remain within ~+/- 1"
from a radius of 2" out to 40", providing further evidence that Sgr A* is
indeed at or extremely close to the dynamical center of the Galactic nucleus
stellar distribution. The 1.9 micron surface brightness increases inwards to
0.9" and then decreases or levels off closer to Sgr A*, possibly indicating the
core radius of the central stellar distribution or depletion of the late-type
stars by stellar collisions near the central black hole.Comment: 43 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables; Accepted to ApJ (9/1/03 issue
A mid-infrared survey of the inner 2 Ă 1.5 degrees of the Galaxy with Spitzer/IRAC
We present a survey of Spitzer Space Telescope/IRAC observations of the central 2 Ă 1.5 degrees (265 Ă 200 pc) of the Galaxy at 3-8 ÎŒm. These data represent the highest spatial resolution and sensitivity large-scale map made to date of the Galactic Center (GC) at mid-infrared wavelengths. The IRAC data provide a census of the optically obscured stellar sources as well as a detailed map of the highly filamentary structure in the interstellar medium. The diffuse emission is dominated by PAH emission from small grains in star-forming regions. Dark clouds displaying a large variety of sizes and morphologies are imaged, many of which remain opaque at IRAC wavelengths. Using a multiwavelength comparison, we determine which objects are likely to be in the foreground and which are located at the GC. We find no counterparts at IRAC wavelengths to the unique system of linear, nonthermal radio filaments present at the GC
Massive Young Stellar Objects in the Galactic Center. I. Spectroscopic Identification from Spitzer/IRS Observations
We present results from our spectroscopic study, using the Infrared
Spectrograph (IRS) onboard the Spitzer Space Telescope, designed to identify
massive young stellar objects (YSOs) in the Galactic Center (GC). Our sample of
107 YSO candidates was selected based on IRAC colors from the high spatial
resolution, high sensitivity Spitzer/IRAC images in the Central Molecular Zone
(CMZ), which spans the central ~300 pc region of the Milky Way Galaxy. We
obtained IRS spectra over 5um to 35um using both high- and low-resolution IRS
modules. We spectroscopically identify massive YSOs by the presence of a 15.4um
shoulder on the absorption profile of 15um CO2 ice, suggestive of CO2 ice mixed
with CH3OH ice on grains. This 15.4um shoulder is clearly observed in 16
sources and possibly observed in an additional 19 sources. We show that 9
massive YSOs also reveal molecular gas-phase absorption from CO2, C2H2, and/or
HCN, which traces warm and dense gas in YSOs. Our results provide the first
spectroscopic census of the massive YSO population in the GC. We fit YSO models
to the observed spectral energy distributions and find YSO masses of 8 - 23
Msun, which generally agree with the masses derived from observed radio
continuum emission. We find that about 50% of photometrically identified YSOs
are confirmed with our spectroscopic study. This implies a preliminary star
formation rate of ~0.07 Msun/yr at the GC.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Discovery of a Luminous Blue Variable with an Ejection Nebula Near the Quintuplet Cluster
We report on the discovery of a luminous blue variable (LBV) lying â7 pc in projection from the Quintuplet cluster. This source, which we call LBV G0.120 â 0.048, was selected for spectroscopy owing to its detection as a strong source of Paschen-α (Pα) excess in a recent narrowband imaging survey of the Galactic center region with the Hubble Space Telescope/Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer. The K-band spectrum is similar to that of the Pistol Star and other known LBVs. The new LBV was previously cataloged as a photometric variable star, exhibiting brightness fluctuations of up to â1 mag between 1994 and 1997, with significant variability also occurring on month-to-month timescales. The luminosity of LBV G0.120 â 0.048, as derived from Two-Micron All Sky Survey photometry, is approximately equivalent to that of the Pistol Star. However, the time-averaged brightness of LBV G0.120 â 0.048 between 1994 and 1997 exceeded that of the Pistol Star; LBV G0.120 â 0.048 also suffers more extinction, which suggests that it was intrinsically more luminous in the infrared than the Pistol Star between 1994 and 1997. Pα images reveal a thin circular nebula centered on LBV G0.120 â 0.048 with a physical radius of â0.8 pc. We suggest that this nebula is a shell of ejected material launched from a discrete eruption that occurred between 5000 and 10,000 years ago. Because of the very short amount of time that evolved massive stars spend in the LBV phase, and the close proximity of LBV G0.120 â 0.048 to the Quintuplet cluster, we suggest that this object might be coeval with the cluster, and may have once resided within it
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