The Galactic Center Lobe as an HII Region
L. D. Anderson, Matteo Luisi, B. Liu, Dylan J. Linville, Robert A., Benjamin, Natasha Hurley-Walker, N. M. McClure-Griffiths, and Catherine, Zucker

TL;DR
This study investigates the Galactic Center Lobe, suggesting it is a foreground HII region about 2 kpc away, based on multi-wavelength observations and stellar cluster analysis, challenging previous assumptions of its Galactic center origin.
Contribution
The paper provides evidence that the GCL is a foreground HII region at ~2 kpc, contrasting prior ideas of its Galactic center association, through detailed MIR, radio, and stellar data analysis.
Findings
GCL's properties match those of Galactic HII regions
Identified stellar cluster and young stellar objects at ~1.7 kpc
GCL likely located ~2 kpc from the Sun
Abstract
The Galactic center lobe (GCL) is an object ~1{\deg} across that is located north of the Galactic center. In the mid-infrared (MIR) the GCL appears as two 8.0m filaments between which is strong 24m and radio continuum emission. Due to its morphology and location in the sky, previous authors have argued that the GCL is located in the Galactic center region, created by outflows from star formation or by activity of the central black hole Sagittarius A*. In an associated paper (Hurley-Walker et al., 2024, in press), low-frequency radio emission indicates that the GCL must instead lie foreground to the Galactic center. If the GCL is foreground to the Galactic center, it is likely to be a type of object common throughout the Galactic disk; we here investigate whether its properties are similar to those of Galactic HII regions. We find that the GCL's MIR morphology, MIR flux…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
