A wind-blown bubble in the Central Molecular Zone cloud G0.253+0.016
J. D. Henshaw, M. R. Krumholz, N. O. Butterfield, J. Mackey, A., Ginsburg, T. J. Haworth, F. Nogueras-Lara, A. T. Barnes, S. N. Longmore, J., Bally, J. M. D. Kruijssen, E. A. C. Mills, H. Beuther, D. L. Walker, C., Battersby, A. Bulatek, T. Henning, J. Ott, J. D. Soler

TL;DR
This study investigates an arc-shaped molecular feature in the dense, star-formation-quiet cloud G0.253+0.016, proposing it results from stellar feedback, indicating recent star formation activity that may be hidden by high extinction.
Contribution
It presents evidence that the arc is an expanding bubble driven by stellar winds, suggesting recent in-situ star formation in a previously quiescent molecular cloud.
Findings
The arc has a radius of 1.3 pc and expands at about 5.2 km/s.
Radio and recombination line emissions indicate a physical link between molecular and ionised gas.
The inferred star is a B1-O8.5 type, with a mass of 12-20 solar masses.
Abstract
G0.253+0.016, commonly referred to as "the Brick" and located within the Central Molecular Zone, is one of the densest ( cm) molecular clouds in the Galaxy to lack signatures of widespread star formation. We set out to constrain the origins of an arc-shaped molecular line emission feature located within the cloud. We determine that the arc, centred on , has a radius of pc and kinematics indicative of the presence of a shell expanding at km s. Extended radio continuum emission fills the arc cavity and recombination line emission peaks at a similar velocity to the arc, implying that the molecular and ionised gas are physically related. The inferred Lyman continuum photon rate is photons s, consistent with a star of spectral type B1-O8.5,…
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