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A&A 447, 533-544 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054070
Molecular cloud shredding in the Galactic Bar
H. S. LisztNational Radio Astronomy Observatory, 520 Edgemont Road, 22903-2475 Charlottesville, VA, USA
e-mail: hliszt@nrao.edu
(Received 18 August 2005 / Accepted 13 October 2005 )
Abstract
Seen just outside the innermost regions of the galactic center, the
kinematics of molecular gas are dominated by a handful of compact but
unusually broad-lined features of enigmatic origin. We show, using
previous data, that there is a family of such features whose members
are distinguished morphologically by their extreme vertical
extension, perpendicular to the inclined plane of the overall gas tilt.
Having isolated the features spatially, we mapped them with varying
degrees of completeness at high resolution (1´) in lines of 12CO, 13CO and CS. Although very broad profiles exist in some individual beams, more generally we resolved the kinematics into spatial gradients which earlier were smeared in broader beams to form wider
lines. The largest apparent velocity gradients are typically with
respect to galactic latitude but motions are confined to the range of
velocities inside the galactic terminal velocity, indicating that it
is the galactic gravitational potential which is being tapped to create
the observed kinematics.
Key words: Galaxy: nucleus -- ISM: clouds -- ISM: molecules
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2006
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