Dense gas in the Galactic central molecular zone is warm and heated by turbulence
Adam Ginsburg, Christian Henkel, Yiping Ao, Denise Riquelme, Jens, Kauffmann, Thushara Pillai, Elisabeth A.C. Mills, Miguel A. Requena-Torres,, Katharina Immer, Leonardo Testi, Juergen Ott, John Bally, Cara Battersby,, Jeremy Darling, Susanne Aalto, Thomas Stanke, Sarah Kendrew

TL;DR
This study maps the temperature of dense gas in the Galactic center's CMZ, revealing it is warm, heated mainly by turbulence, and similar to starburst galaxy centers, with implications for understanding extreme star formation environments.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed temperature maps of the CMZ's dense gas and demonstrates turbulence as the primary heating mechanism over cosmic rays.
Findings
Dense gas temperatures range from 60 K to over 100 K.
Turbulent heating explains the observed temperatures.
Cosmic rays are not the dominant heating source.
Abstract
The Galactic center is the closest region in which we can study star formation under extreme physical conditions like those in high-redshift galaxies. We measure the temperature of the dense gas in the central molecular zone (CMZ) and examine what drives it. We mapped the inner 300 pc of the CMZ in the temperature-sensitive J = 3-2 para-formaldehyde (p-HCO) transitions. We used the line ratio to determine the gas temperature in cm gas. We have produced temperature maps and cubes with 30" and 1 km/s resolution and published all data in FITS form. Dense gas temperatures in the Galactic center range from ~60 K to > 100 K in selected regions. The highest gas temperatures T_G > 100 K are observed around the Sgr B2 cores, in the extended Sgr B2 cloud, the 20 km/s and 50 km/s clouds, and in "The Brick" (G0.253+0.016). We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
