The Milky Way Heart: Investigating molecular gas and gamma-ray morphologies in the Central Molecular Zone
David I. Jones (1), Michael Burton (2), Paul Jones (2,3), Andrew Walsh, (4), Gavin Rowell (5), and Felix Aharonian (6,1) ((1) MPIfK, (2) UNSW, (3), Universidad de Chile, (4) JCU, (5) University of Adelaide, (6) DIAS)

TL;DR
This study investigates the correlation between molecular gas and gamma-ray emission in the Galactic Center's CMZ using new multi-line millimeter data, revealing optical depths and spatial relationships that inform the hadronic origin of gamma-rays.
Contribution
It introduces multi-line molecular observations, including isotopologue analysis, to better understand the physical conditions and correlations with gamma-ray emission in the CMZ.
Findings
Radio continuum correlates better with gamma-ray peaks.
Optical depths are consistently around 2-4 across the CMZ.
Molecular line emission peaks are offset from gamma-ray peaks.
Abstract
Since the discovery of a broad distribution of very high energy (VHE; >0.1 TeV) gamma-rays in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) of the Galaxy in 2006 by the HESS collaboration, the correlation of this emission with the integrated intensity of the CS(1-0) molecular line emission has inferred a hadronic origin for the gamma-rays. Here we describe the beginning of our investigation into the strength of this correlation utilising new multi-line millimeter data from the Mopra CMZ and HOP surveys and multi-wavelength GBT radio continuum observations towards the CMZ and compare these in detail with the diffuse TeV gamma-ray emission from HESS. The benefit of these new data is that they allow us to simultaneously observe and analyse correlations using a large number (>10) of molecular species, some of which contain their isotopologue pairs. The use of isotopologue pairs is especially powerful,…
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