Kinetic temperatures toward X1/X2 orbit interceptions regions and Giant Molecular Loops in the Galactic center region
D. Riquelme, M.A. Amo-Baladron, J. Martin-Pintado, R. Mauersberger, S., Martin, L. Bronfman

TL;DR
This study measures the kinetic temperatures of molecular clouds in the Galactic center, revealing shock heating as a dominant process, especially in high-latitude clouds associated with giant molecular loops.
Contribution
It provides the first kinetic temperature measurements of high-latitude halo clouds in the Galactic center region, highlighting shock heating as a key process.
Findings
High kinetic temperatures (up to 150 K) in Galactic center clouds.
Detection of two temperature components in the Central Molecular Zone.
Shock processes are identified as the main heating mechanism.
Abstract
Context: It is well known that the kinetic temperatures, Tkin, of the molecular clouds in the Galactic center region are higher than in typical disk clouds. However, the Tkin of the molecular complexes found at higher latitudes towards the giant molecular loops in the central region of the Galaxy is so far unknown. The gas of these high latitude molecular clouds (hereafter referred to as halo clouds) is located in a region where the gas in the disk may interact with the gas in the halo in the Galactic center region. Aims: To derive Tkin in the molecular clouds at high latitude and understand the physical process responsible for the heating of the molecular gas both in the Central Molecular Zone (the concentration of molecular gas in the inner 500 pc) and in the giant molecular loops. Methods: We measured the metastable inversion transitions of NH3 from (1,1) to (6,6) toward six…
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