Mathematics – Logic
Scientific paper
Jul 1994
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1994apj...429l..77h&link_type=abstract
The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 429, no. 2, pt. 2, p. L77-L80
Mathematics
Logic
67
Carbon Monoxide, Collisions, Emission, Galaxies, High Resolution, Images, Kinematics, Molecular Clouds, Sagittarius Constellation, Arrays, Mapping, Millimeter Waves, Photoacoustic Spectroscopy, Radio Telescopes
Scientific paper
We present high-resolution images of the (13)CO(J = 1 to 0) emission from the molecular cloud near the Sgr B2 star-forming complex taken with the Nobeyama 45 m telescope. The data, supplemented by the larger maps taken with the Bell Labs 7 m telescope by Bally et al., show three characteristic kinematical features; (1) a "Shell" of emission seen at VLSR = 20 to 40 km/sec, (2) close morphological correlation between a depression in emission or a 'Hole' at VLSR = 40 to 50 km/sec and a well-defined emission region or a 'Clump' at VLSR = 70 to 80 km/sec, and (3) a straight ridge of emission or an 'Edge' seen at VLSR = 50 to 70 km/sec. The appearance and relative location of the Shell, the Hole, and the Clump are similar to those associated with a cloud collision event visualized by numerical simulations. We propose a scenario in which a dense, massive (106 solar mass) cloud (Clump) approximately 10 pc in diameter has collided, at a relative velocity of approximately 30 km/sec, with the extended less dense gas of the molecular cloud complex in the Galactic center region, and has created a hole with a bow shock (Hole and Shell). In the course of this collision, dense and massive molecular cloud cores may have formed at the interface between the colliding clouds, and their collapse resulted in the current burst of massive star formation in the Sgr B2 complex. This is the clearest observed case of a collision event between giant molecular clouds that triggers intense formation of massive (O-ty pe) stars.
Hasegawa Tetsuo
Miyawaki Ryosuke
Sato Fumio
Whiteoak John B.
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