Herschel observations of the Sgr B2 cores: Hydrides, warm CO, and cold dust
M. Etxaluze, J. R. Goicoechea, J. Cernicharo, E. T. Polehampton, A., Noriega-Crespo, S. Molinari, B. M. Swinyard, R. Wu, and J. Bally

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel far-IR/submm observations to analyze the physical and chemical conditions of the Sgr B2 star-forming cores, revealing multiple gas temperature components, high-density tracers, and the influence of UV radiation and shocks.
Contribution
First comprehensive Herschel-based analysis of Sgr B2 cores, identifying multiple gas temperature components and the role of UV radiation and shocks in heating.
Findings
Detection of two gas temperature components: warm envelope and hot core.
High-density tracers and strong [N II] emission indicate clumpy morphology and UV influence.
Photodissociation regions explain CO line ratios and uniform luminosity ratios.
Abstract
Sagittarius B2 (Sgr B2) is one of the most massive and luminous star-forming regions in the Galaxy and shows chemical and physical conditions similar to those in distant extragalactic starbursts. We present large-scale far-IR/submm photometric images and spectroscopic maps taken with the PACS and SPIRE instruments onboard Herschel. The spectra towards the Sgr B2 star-forming cores, B2(M) and B2(N), are characterized by strong CO line emission, emission lines from high-density tracers (HCN, HCO+, and H2S), [N II] 205 um emission from ionized gas, and absorption lines from hydride molecules (OH+, H2O+, H2O, CH+, CH, SH+, HF, NH, NH2, and NH3). The rotational population diagrams of CO suggest the presence of two gas temperature components: an extended warm component, which is associated with the extended envelope, and a hotter component, which is seen towards the B2(M) and B2(N) cores. As…
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