Cometary shaped sources at the Galactic Center - Evidence for a wind from the central 0.2 pc
K. Muzic, A. Eckart, R. Schoedel, R. Buchholz, M. Zamaninasab

TL;DR
This study investigates cometary-shaped sources near the Galactic Center, providing evidence for a collimated wind from Sgr A* that influences the morphology and dynamics of bow-shock features.
Contribution
The paper develops a bow-shock model to constrain the external wind's velocity and demonstrates that a collective outflow from the central stellar cluster explains observed features better than a single star's wind.
Findings
External wind velocity estimated from bow-shock morphology
Collimated outflow from the central stellar cluster explains features
Presence of a strong outbound wind supports inefficient accretion models
Abstract
In 2007 we reported two cometary shaped sources in the vicinity of Sgr A* (0.8" and 3.4" projected distance), named X7 and X3. The symmetry axes of the two sources are aligned to within 5 degrees in the plane of the sky and the tips of their bow-shocks point towards Sgr A*. Our measurements show that the proper motion vectors of both features are pointing in directions more than 45 deg away from the line that connects them with Sgr A*. This misalignment of the bow-shock symmetry axes and their proper motion vectors, combined with the high proper motion velocities of several 100 km/s, suggest that the bow-shocks must be produced by an interaction with some external fast wind, possibly coming from Sgr A*, or stars in its vicinity. We have developed a bow-shock model to fit the observed morphology and constrain the source of the external wind. The result of our modeling allows us to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
