ALMA uncovers highly filamentary structure towards the Sgr E region
J. Wallace (1), C. Battersby (1), E. A. C. Mills (2), J. D. Henshaw (3, and 4), M. C. Sormani (5), A. Ginsburg (6), A. T. Barnes (7), H. P., Hatchfield (1), S. C. O. Glover (5), L. D. Anderson (8) ((1) University of, Connecticut, Department of Physics, (2) Department of Physics

TL;DR
This study reveals highly filamentary molecular structures in the Sgr E region near the Galactic center, observed with ALMA, showing their physical properties and suggesting they are stretched by gravitational forces during gas inflow.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA observations of filamentary structures in the Sgr E region, providing insights into their properties and the dynamics of gas in the Galactic center environment.
Findings
Filaments are ~0.1 pc wide and nearly parallel to the Galactic plane.
Two velocity components separated by ~15 km/s with narrow linewidths.
Filaments are likely stretched by gravitational acceleration toward the Galactic center.
Abstract
We report on the discovery of linear filaments observed in CO(1-0) emission for a field of view toward the Sgr E star forming region centered at (l,b)=(358.720, 0.011). The Sgr E region is thought to be at the turbulent intersection of the ''far dust lane'' associated with the Galactic bar and the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). This region is subject to strong accelerations which are generally thought to inhibit star formation, yet Sgr E contains a large number of HII regions. We present CO(1-0), CO(1-0), and CO(1-0) spectral line observations from ALMA and provide measurements of the physical and kinematic properties for two of the brightest filaments. These filaments have widths (FWHM) of pc and are oriented nearly parallel to the Galactic plane, with angles from the Galactic plane of . The filaments are elongated,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Atomic and Molecular Physics
