Surviving the hole I: Spatially resolved chemistry around Sgr A*
S. Mart\'in, J. Mart\'in-Pintado, M. Montero-Casta\~no, P. T. P. Ho,, R. Blundell

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution molecular line observations of the central parsecs around Sgr A*, revealing chemical differentiation, molecular distribution, and gas dynamics in the Galactic center's hostile environment.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed spatially resolved chemical analysis of the molecular structures near Sgr A* using multiple tracers at high resolution.
Findings
CN traces all circumnuclear disk structures and is concentrated in optically thick clumps.
H2CO traces a shell-like structure indicating expansion against GMCs.
Densest material traced by SiO and HC3N is located in the southern CND.
Abstract
The interstellar region within the few central parsecs around the super-massive black hole, Sgr A* at the very Galactic center is composed by a number of overlapping molecular structures which are subject to one of the most hostile physical environments in the Galaxy. We present high resolution (4"x3"~0.16x0.11 pc) interferometric observations of CN, 13CN, H2CO, SiO, c-C3H2 and HC3N emission at 1.3 mm towards the central ~4 pc of the Galactic center region. Strong differences are observed in the distribution of the different molecules. The UV resistant species CN, the only species tracing all previously identified circumnuclear disk (CND) structures, is mostly concentrated in optically thick clumps in the rotating filaments around Sgr A*. H2CO emission traces a shell-like structure that we interpret as the expansion of Sgr A East against the 50 km/s and 20 km/s giant molecular clouds…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
