A Detailed Observational Study of Molecular Loops 1 and 2 in the Galactic Center
Kazufumi Torii, Natsuko Kudo, Motosuji Fujishita, Tokuichi Kawase,, Hiroaki Yamamoto, Akiko Kawamura, Norikazu Mizuno, Toshikazu Onishi, Akira, Mizuno, Mami Machida, Kunio Takahashi, Satoshi Nozawa, Ryoji Matsumoto, and, Yasuo Fukui

TL;DR
This study provides detailed observational analysis of two large molecular loops in the Galactic center, revealing their structure, mass, kinematics, and magnetic properties, and compares findings with recent magnetized disk simulations.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive observational characterization of the loops, including their small-scale features, mass estimates, and magnetic implications, aligning with recent theoretical models.
Findings
Loops contain atomic and molecular gas with a total mass of ~3.3 million solar masses.
Loops exhibit rotation at ~47 km/s and expansion at ~141 km/s.
Magnetic flotation and instability likely play roles in loop formation, consistent with simulations.
Abstract
Fukui et al. (2006) discovered two huge molecular loops in the Galactic center located in (l, b) ~ (355 deg-359 deg, 0 deg-2 deg) in a large velocity range of -180-40 km s^-1. Following the discovery, we present detailed observational properties of the two loops based on NANTEN 12CO(J=1-0) and 13CO(J=1-0) datasets at 10 pc resolution including a complete set of velocity channel distributions and comparisons with HI and dust emissions as well as with the other broad molecular features. We find new features on smaller scales in the loops including helical distributions in the loop tops and vertical spurs. The loops have counterparts of the HI gas indicating that the loops include atomic gas. The IRAS far infrared emission is also associated with the loops and was used to derive an X-factor of 0.7(+/-0.1){\times}10^20 cm^-2 (K km s^-1)^-1 to convert the 12CO intensity into the total…
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