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- 2018
High-velocity hot CO emission close to Sgr A* - Herschel/HIFI submillimeter spectral survey toward Sgr A*DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201833684 Abstract: The properties of molecular gas, the fuel that forms stars, inside the cavity of the circumnuclear disk (CND) are not well constrained. We present results of a velocity-resolved submillimeter scan (~480–1250 GHz) and [C?II] 158 μm line observations carried out with Herschel/HIFI toward Sgr A*; these results are complemented by a ~2′ × 2′ 12CO (J = 3?2) map taken with the IRAM 30 m telescope at ~7″ resolution. We report the presence of high positive-velocity emission (up to about +300 km s?1) detected in the wings of 12CO J = 5?4 to 10?9 lines. This wing component is also seen in H2O (11,0?10,1), a tracer of hot molecular gas; in [C?II]158 μm, an unambiguous tracer of UV radiation; but not in [C?I] 492, 806 GHz. This first measurement of the high-velocity 12CO rotational ladder toward Sgr A* adds more evidence that hot molecular gas exists inside the cavity of the CND, relatively close to the supermassive black hole (<1 pc). Observed by ALMA, this velocity range appears as a collection of 12CO (J = 3?2) cloudlets lying in a very harsh environment that is pervaded by intense UV radiation fields, shocks, and affected by strong gravitational shears. We constrain the physical conditions of the high positive-velocity CO gas component by comparing with non-LTE excitation and radiative transfer models. We infer Tk ? 400 K–2000 K for nH ? (0.2?1.0) × 105 cm?3. These results point toward the important role of stellar UV radiation, but we show that radiative heating alone cannot explain the excitation of this ~10?60 M⊙ component of hot molecular gas inside the central cavity. Instead, strongly irradiated shocks are promising candidates
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