G-0.02-0.07, the Compact HII Region Complex nearest to the Galactic Center with ALMA
Masato Tsuboi, Yoshimi Kitamura, Kenta Uehara, Atsushi Miyazaki,, Ryosuke Miyawaki, Takahiro Tsutsumi, and Makoto Miyoshi

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the structure, physical properties, and star formation activity of the compact HII region complex G-0.02-0.07 near the Galactic Center, revealing shock-induced star formation and molecular gas dynamics.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA imaging of the G-0.02-0.07 HII complex, revealing its shell-like morphology, physical conditions, and evidence of shock-triggered star formation near the Galactic Center.
Findings
HII regions are shell-like with distinct bright and dark halves.
HII-A, B, C are on the near side; HII-D on the far side of the molecular cloud.
Expansion velocities range from 11.1 to 16.7 km/s, with ages around 10^4 years.
Abstract
We have observed the compact HII region complex nearest to the dynamical center of the Galaxy, G-0.02-0.07, using ALMA in the H42a recombination line, CS J=2-1, H13CO+ J=1-0, and SiO v=0, J=2-1 emission lines, and 86 GHz continuum emission. The HII regions HII-A to HII-C in the cluster are clearly resolved into a shell-like feature with a bright-half and a dark-half in the recombination line and continuum emission. The absorption features in the molecular emission lines show that HII-A, B and C are located on the near side of the 50 km/s Molecular Cloud (50MC) but HII-D is located on the far side. The electron temperatures and densities range Te=5150-5920 K and ne=950-2340 cm-3, respectively. The electron temperatures on the bright-half are slightly lower than those on the dark-half, while the electron densities on the bright-half are slightly higher than those on the dark-half. The HII…
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