Approaching hell's kitchen: Molecular daredevil clouds in the vicinity of Sgr A*
Lydia Moser, \'Alvaro S\'anchez-Monge, Andreas Eckart, Miguel Angel, Requena-Torres, Macarena Garc\'ia-Marin, Devaky Kunneriath, Anton Zensus,, Silke Britzen, Nadeen Sabha, Banafsheh Shahzamanian, Abhijeet Borkar, and, Sebastian Fischer

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze molecular clouds and emission features near Sgr A*, revealing complex gas dynamics, chemical compositions, and the physical state of the central parsec of the Galactic Center.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution sub-millimeter view of the Galactic Center, identifying molecular cloud structures and their relation to the minispiral and central black hole environment.
Findings
Detection of multiple molecular species including CS, H13CO+, and SiO.
Identification of a central cloud association with higher excitation and abundance ratios.
Molecular emission observed at velocities up to 200 km/s.
Abstract
We report serendipitous detections of line emission with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in band 3, 6, and 7 in the central parsec down to within 1" around Sgr A* at an up to now highest resolution (<0.5") view of the Galactic Center (GC) in the sub-millimeter (sub-mm) domain. From the 100 GHz continuum and the H39\alpha emission we obtain a uniform electron temperature around 6000 K for the minispiral. The spectral index of Sgr A* is ~ 0.5 at 100 - 250 GHz and ~ 0.0 at 230 - 340 GHz. The bright sources in the center show spectral indices around -0.1 implying Bremsstrahlung emission, while dust emission is emerging in the minispiral exterior. Apart from CS, which is most widespread in the center, H13CO+, HC3N, SiO, SO, C2H, CH3OH, 13CS and N2H+ are also detected. The bulk of the clumpy emission regions is at positive velocities and in a region confined by the…
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