The linewidth-size relationship in the dense ISM of the Central Molecular Zone
Rahul Shetty, Christopher N. Beaumont, Michael G. Burton, Brandon C., Kelly, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This study measures the linewidth-size relationship in the dense interstellar medium of the Galactic Center's Central Molecular Zone, revealing turbulence driven on large scales and higher velocity dispersions compared to typical molecular clouds.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the sigma-R relationship in the CMZ using dendrograms and Bayesian inference, highlighting turbulence characteristics distinct from local clouds.
Findings
Power-law sigma-R relationship with exponent 0.3-1.1
Turbulence driven on scales >30 pc in the CMZ
Higher velocity dispersions compared to typical molecular clouds
Abstract
The linewidth (sigma) - size (R) relationship has been extensively measured and analysed, in both the local ISM and in nearby normal galaxies. Generally, a power-law describes the relationship well with an index ranging from 0.2-0.6, now referred to as one of "Larson's Relationships." The nature of turbulence and star formation is considered to be intimately related to these relationships, so evaluating the sigma-R correlations in various environments is important for developing a comprehensive understanding of the ISM. We measure the sigma-R relationship in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) of the Galactic Centre using spectral line observations of the high density tracers N2H+, HCN, H13CN, and HCO+. We use dendrograms, which map the hierarchical nature of the position-position-velocity (PPV) data, to compute sigma and R of contiguous structures. The dispersions range from ~2-30 km/s in…
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