Tails of Gravity: Persistence of Star Formation in the CMZ Environment
Linjing Feng, Sihan Jiao, Fengwei Xu, Hauyu Baobab Liu, Xing Lu, Neal J. Evans II, Elisabeth A.C. Mills, Attila Kov\'acs, Qizhou Zhang, Yuxin Lin, Jingwen Wu, Chao-Wei Tsai, Di Li, Zhi-Yu Zhang, Zhiqiang Yan, Hao Ruan, Fangyuan Deng, Yuanzhen Xiong, Ruofei Zhang

TL;DR
This study investigates star-forming gas in the Galactic Center's molecular clouds, revealing that their star formation processes and gas structures are similar to those in less extreme environments, suggesting self-regulation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that star formation in the CMZ follows similar patterns to other regions, with the power-law component of N-PDFs representing bound gas, indicating self-regulation in extreme environments.
Findings
N-PDFs of CMZ clouds are mostly log-normal or log-normal + power-law.
Masses of bound gas and cores correlate with star formation rates.
Star formation processes in the CMZ resemble those in the Galactic disk.
Abstract
We characterize star-forming gas in six molecular clouds (Sgr B1-off, Sgr B2, Sgr C, the 20 km s and 50 km s molecular clouds, and the Brick) in the Galactic central molecular zone (CMZ), and compare their star-forming activities with those in molecular clouds outside the CMZ. Using multi-band continuum observations taken from , , JCMT/SCUBA-2, and CSO/SHARC2, we derived 8.5" resolution column density maps for the CMZ clouds and evaluated the column density probability distribution functions (N-PDFs). With the archival Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) 1.3 mm dust continuum data, we further evaluated the mass of the most massive cores (). We find that the N-PDFs of four of the selected CMZ clouds are well described by a piecewise log-normal + power-law function, while the N-PDFs of the remaining two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Fullerene Chemistry and Applications · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
