Evidence of a Cloud-Cloud Collision from Overshooting Gas in the Galactic Center
Savannah R. Gramze, Adam Ginsburg, David S. Meier, Juergen Ott, Yancy, Shirley, Mattia C. Sormani, Brian E. Svoboda

TL;DR
This study presents observational evidence of a cloud-cloud collision in the Galactic Center, caused by overshooting gas along the galaxy's bar lanes, using spectral line measurements from ALMA/ACA.
Contribution
It provides the first direct observational evidence of gas overshooting the Central Molecular Zone and colliding with the opposite bar lane in the Milky Way.
Findings
Detected a velocity bridge indicating a cloud-cloud collision.
Measured gas temperature of approximately 60 K in G5.
Found a local X$_{CO}$ value 10-20 times lower than the Galactic average.
Abstract
The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy with "bar lanes" that bring gas towards the Galactic Center. Gas flowing along these bar lanes often overshoots, and instead of accreting onto the Central Molecular Zone, it collides with the bar lane on the opposite side of the Galaxy. We observed G5, a cloud which we believe is the site of one such collision, near the Galactic Center at (l,b) = (+5.4, -0.4) with the ALMA/ACA. We took measurements of the spectral lines CO J=2-1, CO J=2-1, CO J=2-1, HCO J=3-2, HCO J=3-2, CHOH J=4-3, OCS J=18-17 and SiO J=5-4. We observed a velocity bridge between two clouds at 50 km/s and 150 km/sin our position-velocity diagram, which is direct evidence of a cloud-cloud collision. We measured an average gas temperature of 60 K in G5 using HCO integrated intensity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
