4.7 Article

ABSORPTION LINE SURVEY OF H3+ TOWARD THE GALACTIC CENTER SOURCES. II. EIGHT INFRARED SOURCES WITHIN 30 pc OF THE GALACTIC CENTER

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 688, Issue 1, Pages 306-319

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/591657

Keywords

Galaxy: center; ISM: clouds; ISM: lines and bands; ISM: molecules; stars: individual (GC IRS 1W, GC IRS 21, GC IRS 3, GCS 3-2, NHS 21, NHS 22, NHS 25, NHS 42)

Funding

  1. Joint Astronomy Centre
  2. UK Science and Facilities Research Council
  3. Gemini Observatory
  4. Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc.
  5. international Gemini partnership of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America
  6. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science fellowship
  7. NSF [PHY 05-55486, PHY 03-54200]
  8. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  9. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0849577] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Infrared absorption lines of H-3(+), including the metastable R(3, 3)(l) line, have been observed toward eight bright infrared sources associated with hot and massive stars located in and between the Galactic center cluster and the Quintuplet cluster 30 pc to the east. The absorption lines with high-velocity dispersion arise in the Galaxy's central molecular zone (CMZ) as well as in foreground spiral arms. The temperature and density of the gas in the CMZ, as determined from the relative strengths of the H-3(+) lines, are T 200-300 K and n <= 50-200 cm(-3). The detection of high column densities of H-3(+) toward all eight stars implies that this warm and diffuse gaseous environment is widespread in the CMZ. The products of the ionization rate and path length for these sight lines are 1000 and 10 times higher than in dense and diffuse clouds in the Galactic disk, respectively, indicating that the ionization rate, zeta, is not less than 10(-15) s(-1) and that L is at least on the order of 50 pc. The warm and diffuse gas is an important component of the CMZ, in addition to the three previously known gaseous environments: ( 1) cold molecular clouds observed by radio emission of CO and other molecules; (2) hot (T = 10(4)-10(6) K) and highly ionized diffuse gas (n(e) = 10-100 cm(-3)) seen in radio recombination lines, far infrared atomic lines, and radio-wave scattering; and (3) ultrahot (T = 10(7)-10(8) K) X-ray emitting plasma. Its prevalence significantly changes the understanding of the environment of the CMZ. The sight line toward GC IRS 3 is unique in showing an additional H-3(+) absorption component, which is interpreted as being due to either a cloud associated with circumnuclear disk or the 50 km s(-1) cloud'' known from radio observations. An infrared pumping scheme is examined as a mechanism to populate the (3,3) metastable level in this cloud.

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