Non-Thermal Insights on Mass and Energy Flows Through the Galactic Centre and into the Fermi Bubbles
Roland M. Crocker

TL;DR
This study models the mass and energy flows driven by star formation in the Galactic Centre, linking observed non-thermal signals to outflows that influence the Fermi Bubbles and Galactic halo over billions of years.
Contribution
It introduces a simple, constrained model connecting star formation, outflows, and non-thermal signals to explain the Fermi Bubbles and halo gas dynamics.
Findings
Star formation rate in the GC is 0.04-0.12 M_sun/year.
Mass accretion onto the GC is approximately 0.3 M_sun/year.
Outflows do not escape the Galaxy but fountain back, affecting halo gas.
Abstract
We construct a simple model of the star-formation- (and resultant supernova-) driven mass and energy flows through the inner ~200 pc (in diameter) of the Galaxy. Our modelling is constrained, in particular, by the non-thermal radio continuum and {\gamma}-ray signals detected from the region. The modelling points to a current star-formation rate of 0.04 - 0.12 M\msun/year at 2{\sigma} confidence within the region with best-fit value in the range 0.08 - 0.12 M\msun/year which - if sustained over 10 Gyr - would fill out the ~ 10^9 M\msun stellar population of the nuclear bulge. Mass is being accreted on to the Galactic centre (GC) region at a rate ~0.3M\msun/year. The region's star-formation activity drives an outflow of plasma, cosmic rays, and entrained, cooler gas. Neither the plasma nor the entrained gas reaches the gravitational escape speed, however, and all this material fountains…
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