74 MHz Nonthermal Emission from Molecular Clouds: Evidence for a Cosmic Ray Dominated Region at the Galactic Center
F. Yusef-Zadeh, M. Wardle, D. Lis, S. Viti, C. Brogan, E. Chambers, M., Pound, M. Rickert

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that low-energy cosmic rays significantly influence molecular clouds in the Galactic center, affecting their chemistry, heating, and nonthermal emission, with implications for understanding cosmic ray interactions in dense regions.
Contribution
It presents the first multi-wavelength evidence linking nonthermal radio emission, FeI Kalpha line emission, and cosmic ray-driven chemistry in a Galactic center molecular cloud.
Findings
Relativistic electrons are physically associated with the molecular cloud.
Cosmic rays cause high ionization rates and heating, raising gas temperatures to 1000K.
Predicted molecular abundance ratios are consistent with observations.
Abstract
We present 74 MHz radio continuum observations of the Galactic center region. These measurements show nonthermal radio emission arising from molecular clouds that is unaffected by free-free absorption along the line of sight. We focus on one cloud, G0.13--0.13, representative of the population of molecular clouds that are spatially correlated with steep spectrum (alpha^{74MHz}_{327MHz}=1.3\pm0.3) nonthermal emission from the Galactic center region. This cloud lies adjacent to the nonthermal radio filaments of the Arc near l~0.2^0 and is a strong source of 74 MHz continuum, SiO (2-1) and FeI Kalpha 6.4 keV line emission. This three-way correlation provides the most compelling evidence yet that relativistic electrons, here traced by 74 MHz emission, are physically associated with the G0.13--0.13 molecular cloud and that low energy cosmic ray electrons are responsible for the FeI Kalpha…
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