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HII regions and star formation in the galactic center
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
Extract
The centimeter wavelength continuum radiation seen toward the Galactic center (Figure 1) is a mixture of thermal (free-free) and nonthermal (synchrotron) radiation which originates in the nucleus and along the line-of-sight. In this review we discuss only the thermal emission (also see Mezger 1974 and Oort 1977). High-frequency radio continuum and recombination line observations show that the thermal radiation comes from extend, low-density (ELD) HII, and a number of giant “radio HII regions” (see Mezger 1978 for definitions). The approximate half-power contour of the ELD HII (labelled EI in Fig. 1), probably represents a superposition of evolved and expanded HII regions. Thermal radiation outside EI comes predominantly from along the line-of-sight (see Pauls and Mezger 1975).
- Type
- VI. THE GALACTIC NUCLEUS
- Information
- Symposium - International Astronomical Union , Volume 84: The Large-Scale Characteristics of the Galaxy , 1979 , pp. 357 - 366
- Copyright
- Copyright © Reidel 1979
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