A theoretical explanation for the Central Molecular Zone asymmetry
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 475:2 (2017) 2383-2402
Abstract:
It has been known for more than thirty years that the distribution of molecular gas in the innermost 300 parsecs of the Milky Way, the Central Molecular Zone, is strongly asymmetric. Indeed, approximately three quarters of molecular emission comes from positive longitudes, and only one quarter from negative longitudes. However, despite much theoretical effort, the origin of this asymmetry has remained a mystery. Here we show that the asymmetry can be neatly explained by unsteady flow of gas in a barred potential. We use high-resolution 3D hydrodynamical simulations coupled to a state-of-the-art chemical network. Despite the initial conditions and the bar potential being point-symmetric with respect to the Galactic Centre, asymmetries develop spontaneously due to the combination of a hydrodynamical instability known as the 鈥渨iggle instability鈥 and the thermal instability. The observed asymmetry must be transient: observations made tens of megayears in the past or in the future would often show an asymmetry in the opposite sense. Fluctuations of amplitude comparable to the observed asymmetry occur for a large fraction of the time in our simulations, and suggest that the present is not an exceptional moment in the life of our Galaxy.Large-scale three-dimensional Gaussian process extinction mapping
(2017)
A theoretical explanation for the Central Molecular Zone asymmetry
(2017)
Nuclear spirals in the inner Milky Way
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 469:2 (2017) 2251-2262
Abstract:
We use hydrodynamical simulations to construct a new coherent picture for the gas flow in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), the region of our Galaxy within R 鈮 500鈥夆塸c. We relate connected structures observed in (l, b, v) data cubes of molecular tracers to nuclear spiral arms. These arise naturally in hydrodynamical simulations of barred galaxies, and are similar to those that can be seen in external galaxies such as NGC 4303 or NGC 1097. We discuss a face-on view of the CMZ, including the positions of several prominent molecular clouds, such as Sgr B2, the 20 and 50鈥塳m鈥塻鈭1 clouds, the polar arc, Bania Clump 2 and Sgr C. Our model is also consistent with the larger scale gas flow, up to R 鈮 3鈥塳pc, thus providing a consistent picture of the entire Galactic bar region.Nuclear Spirals in the inner Milky Way
(2017)