# ALMA and VLA observations of emission from the environment of Sgr A*

**Authors:** F. Yusef-Zadeh, R. Sch\"odel, M. Wardle, H. Bushouse, W. Cotton, M. J., Royster, D. Kunneriath, D. A. Roberts, E. Gallego-Cano

arXiv: 1706.02750 · 2017-08-02

## TL;DR

This study presents high-resolution millimeter observations of the Galactic center near Sgr A*, revealing emission from stars, a halo of synchrotron emission, and evidence for an outflow affecting the surrounding interstellar medium.

## Contribution

It provides the first detailed millimeter imaging of the environment around Sgr A* and identifies a new halo of emission, offering insights into the accretion flow and outflow mechanisms.

## Key findings

- Detection of millimeter emission from eight stars near Sgr A*
- Identification of a millimeter halo centered on Sgr A*
- Evidence for an outflow sweeping up interstellar material

## Abstract

We present 44 and 226 GHz observations of the Galactic center within 20$"$ of Sgr A*. Millimeter continuum emission at 226 GHz is detected from eight stars that have previously been identified at near-IR and radio wavelengths. We also detect a 5.8 mJy source at 226 GHz coincident with the magnetar SGR~J1745-29 located 2.39$"$ SE of Sgr A* and identify a new 2.5$"\times1.5"$ halo of mm emission centered on Sgr A*. The X-ray emission from this halo has been detected previously and is interpreted in terms of a radiatively inefficient accretion flow. The mm halo surrounds an EW linear feature which appears to arise from Sgr A* and coincides with the diffuse X-ray emission and a minimum in the near-IR extinction. We argue that the millimeter emission is produced by synchrotron emission from relativistic electrons in equipartition with a $\sim 1.5$mG magnetic field. The origin of these is unclear but its coexistence with hot gas supports scenarios in which the gas is produced by the interaction of winds either from the fast moving S-stars, the photo-evaporation of low-mass YSO disks or by a jet-driven outflow from Sgr A*. The spatial anti-correlation of the X-ray, radio and mm emission from the halo and the low near-IR extinction provides compelling evidence for an outflow sweeping up the interstellar material, creating a dust cavity within 2$"$ of Sgr A*. Finally, the radio and mm counterparts to eight near-IR identified stars within $\sim$10\arcs\ of Sgr A* provide accurate astrometry to determine the positional shift between the peak emission at 44 and 226 GHz.

## Full text

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## Figures

29 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.02750/full.md

## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.02750/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.02750