Detection of Widespread Hot Ammonia in the Galactic Center
Elisabeth A.C. Mills, Mark R. Morris

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of high-energy metastable ammonia lines in the Galactic Center, revealing widespread hot molecular gas with temperatures up to 600 K across multiple clouds, indicating a common hot gas component.
Contribution
First detection of metastable ammonia lines at energies above 2200 K in the Galactic Center, demonstrating widespread hot molecular gas in multiple clouds.
Findings
Hot ammonia contributes ~10% of total ammonia in M-0.02-0.07.
Hot ammonia gas is extended over ~10 arcsecond scales.
Detection of nonmetastable ammonia emission in these clouds.
Abstract
We present the detection of metastable inversion lines of ammonia from energy levels high above the ground state. We detect these lines in both emission and absorption toward fifteen of seventeen positions in the central 300 parsecs of the Galaxy. In total, we observe seven metastable transitions of ammonia: (8,8), (9,9), (10,10), (11,11), (12,12), (13,13) and (15,15), with energies (in Kelvins) ranging from 680 to 2200 K. We also map emission from ammonia (8,8) and (9,9) in two clouds in the Sgr A complex (M-0.02-0.07 and M-0.13-0.08), and we find that the line emission is concentrated toward the the dense centers of these molecular clouds. The rotational temperatures derived from the metastable lines toward M-0.02-0.07 and M-0.13-0.08 and an additional cloud (M0.25+0.01) range from 350 to 450 K. Similarly highly-excited lines of ammonia have previously been observed toward Sgr B2,…
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