Detection of Another Molecular Bubble in the Galactic Center
Shiho Tsujimoto, Tomoharu Oka, Shunya Takekawa, Masaya Yamada, Sekito, Tokuyama, Yuhei Iwata, and Justin A. Roll

TL;DR
This study identifies multiple expanding molecular shells in the Galactic center's $l=-1.2^{\
Contribution
It reports the detection and analysis of expanding shells, proposing a new model of a moving star cluster interacting with molecular gas in the Galactic center.
Findings
Five expanding shells detected with broad velocity widths.
Shell energies suggest multiple supernova explosions.
Shell expansion times increase with decreasing Galactic longitude.
Abstract
The region in the Galactic center has a high CO =3-2/=1-0 intensity ratio and extremely broad velocity width. This paper reports the detection of five expanding shells in the region based on the CO =1-0, CO =1-0, CO =3-2, and SiO =8-7 line data sets obtained with the Nobeyama Radio Observatory 45 m telescope and James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The kinetic energy and expansion time of the expanding shells are estimated to be erg and yr, respectively. The origin of these expanding shells is discussed. The total kinetic energy of erg and the typical expansion time of yr correspond to multiple supernova explosions at a rate of - yr. This indicates that the region may be a molecular bubble associated with an embedded massive star cluster,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
