Molecular gas kinematics within the central 250 pc of the Milky Way
J. D. Henshaw, S. N. Longmore, J. M. D. Kruijssen, B. Davies, J., Bally, A. Barnes, C. Battersby, M. Burton, M. R. Cunningham, J. E. Dale, A., Ginsburg, K. Immer, P. A. Jones, S. Kendrew, E. A. C. Mills, S. Molinari, T., J. T. Moore, J. Ott, T. Pillai, J. Rathborne, P. Schilke

TL;DR
This study uses spectral-line observations and a new line fitting algorithm to analyze dense gas kinematics in the central 250 parsecs of the Milky Way, revealing complex structures and proposing models for the gas distribution.
Contribution
Introduces SCOUSE, a novel spectral-line fitting algorithm, and applies it to analyze the complex gas kinematics and structures in the Galactic Center region.
Findings
Gas velocity dispersions range from 2.6 to 53.1 km/s.
Gas is distributed in several streams with lengths of 100-250 pc.
The most recent elliptical orbit model does not match the observed gas distribution.
Abstract
Using spectral-line observations of HNCO, N2H+, and HNC, we investigate the kinematics of dense gas in the central ~250 pc of the Galaxy. We present SCOUSE (Semi-automated multi-COmponent Universal Spectral-line fitting Engine), a line fitting algorithm designed to analyse large volumes of spectral-line data efficiently and systematically. Unlike techniques which do not account for complex line profiles, SCOUSE accurately describes the {l, b, v_LSR} distribution of CMZ gas, which is asymmetric about Sgr A* in both position and velocity. Velocity dispersions range from 2.6 km/s<\sigma<53.1 km/s. A median dispersion of 9.8 km/s, translates to a Mach number, M_3D>28. The gas is distributed throughout several "streams", with projected lengths ~100-250 pc. We link the streams to individual clouds and sub-regions, including Sgr C, the 20 and 50 km/s clouds, the dust ridge, and Sgr B2.…
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.
