A ring of dense molecular gas extending 2-7 pc orbits the supermassive black
hole Sgr A* at the center of our Galaxy. Using the Green Bank Telescope, we
detected water maser lines and both narrow (0.35 km/s) and broad (30 - 50 km/s)
methanol emission from the molecular ring. Two of the strongest methanol lines
at 44 GHz are confirmed as masers by interferometric observations. These class
I methanol masers are collisionally excited and are signatures of early phases
of massive star formation in the disk of the Galaxy, suggesting that star
formation in the molecular ring is in its early phase. Close inspection of the
kinematics of the associated molecular clumps in the HCN (J=1-0) line reveals
broad red-shifted wings indicative of disturbance by protostellar outflows from
young (few times 10^4 yr), massive stars embedded in the clumps. The thermal
methanol profile has a similar shape, with a narrow maser line superimposed on
a broad, red-shifted wing. Additional evidence for the presence of young
massive protostars is provided by shocked molecular hydrogen and a number of
striking ionized and molecular linear filaments in the vicinity of methanol
sources suggestive of 0.5-pc scale protostellar jets. Given that the
circumnuclear molecular ring is kinematically unsettled and thus is likely be
the result of a recent capture, the presence of both methanol emission and
broad, red-shifted HCN emission suggests that star formation in the
circumnuclear ring is in its infancy.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Letters (in press