SIMBAD references

2022MNRAS.509.4758H - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 509, 4758-4774 (2022/February-1)

A wind-blown bubble in the Central Molecular Zone cloud G0.253+0.016.

HENSHAW J.D., KRUMHOLZ M.R., BUTTERFIELD N.O., MACKEY J., GINSBURG A., HAWORTH T.J., NOGUERAS-LARA F., BARNES A.T., LONGMORE S.N., BALLY J., KRUIJSSEN J.M.D., MILLS E.A.C., BEUTHER H., WALKER D.L., BATTERSBY C., BULATEK A., HENNING T., OTT J. and SOLER J.D.

Abstract (from CDS):

G0.253+0.016, commonly referred to as 'the Brick' and located within the Central Molecular Zone, is one of the densest (≃103–4 cm–3) molecular clouds in the Galaxy to lack signatures of widespread star formation. We set out to constrain the origins of an arc-shaped molecular line emission feature located within the cloud. We determine that the arc, centred on {l0,b0} = {0.248, 0.018}, has a radius of 1.3 pc and kinematics indicative of the presence of a shell expanding at 5.2+2.7–1.9 km s–1. Extended radio continuum emission fills the arc cavity and recombination line emission peaks at a similar velocity to the arc, implying that the molecular gas and ionized gas are physically related. The inferred Lyman continuum photon rate is NLyC = 1046.0-1047.9 photons s–1, consistent with a star of spectral type B1-O8.5, corresponding to a mass of ≃12-20 M. We explore two scenarios for the origin of the arc: (i) a partial shell swept up by the wind of an interloper high-mass star and (ii) a partial shell swept up by stellar feedback resulting from in situ star formation. We favour the latter scenario, finding reasonable (factor of a few) agreement between its morphology, dynamics, and energetics and those predicted for an expanding bubble driven by the wind from a high-mass star. The immediate implication is that G0.253+0.016 may not be as quiescent as is commonly accepted. We speculate that the cloud may have produced a <=103 M star cluster >=0.4 Myr ago, and demonstrate that the high-extinction and stellar crowding observed towards G0.253+0.016 may help to obscure such a star cluster from detection.

Abstract Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): ISM: bubbles - ISM: clouds - H ii regions - ISM: kinematics and dynamics - ISM: structure - Galaxy: centre

Simbad objects: 17

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