Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T15:15:34.476Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Non-Circular Gas Motions in the Inner Galaxy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2016

Robert H. Sanders*
Affiliation:
Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Groningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

It is shown that the observed motion of neutral hydrogen in the inner 1000 pc of the Galaxy is, for the most part, consistent with flow on circular streamlines in the potential of the Galactic bulge as derived from the observed distribution of near infrared emission. The implied mass distribution is also consistent with recent kinematic determinations of the stellar mass in the inner few parsecs of the bulge. The non-circular gas motion seen between two and four kpc is most likely due to flow on elliptical streamlines in the presence of a weak bar distortion of the Galactic disk. Circular gas motion in the region of the bulge and elliptical streaming further out is an observed characteristic of flow in barred galaxies and is consistent with our present theoretical understanding of such systems. The implication is that non-circular motions of the molecular clouds in the inner 200 pc have a non-gravitational origin. A possible mechanism for exciting such motions is an accretion event resulting from an encounter of a molecular cloud with a massive black hole. A starburst leading to a high supernovae rate 107 years ago in the inner 50 pc is an alternative explanation. Observations of molecular cloud regions in the nuclei of external normal galaxies could distinguish between alternative mechanisms.

Type
The Large - Scale Interstellar Medium
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1989 

References

Athanassoula, E. & Sellwood, J.A., 1986. Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc. , 221, 213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bally, J., Stark, A.A., Wilson, R.W., & Henkel, C., 1988. Astrophys. J. , 324, 223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bania, T.M., 1977. Astrophys. J. , 216, 381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Becklin, E.E. & Neugebauer, G., 1968. Astrophys. J. , 151, 145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bottema, R. & Sanders, R.H., 1986. Astr. Astrophys. , 158, 297.Google Scholar
Brown, R.L. & Liszt, H.S., 1984. Ann. Rev. Astr. Astrophys , 22, 223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burton, W.B. & Gordon, M.A., 1978. Astr. Astrophys. , 63, 7.Google Scholar
de Vaucouleurs, G., 1964. In The Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds, IAU- URSI Symp. No. 20 , pp88, 195, eds. Kerr, F.J. & Rogers, A.W., Aust. Acad. Sciences, Canberra.Google Scholar
Genzel, R., Townes, C.H. 1987, Ann. Rev. Astr. Astrophys. , 25, 377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gusten, R. & Downs, D., 1980. Astr. Astrophys. , 87, 6.Google Scholar
Hills, J.G., 1975. Nature , 254, 295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaifu, N., Kato, T., & Iguchi, T., 1972. Nature phys. Sci. , 238, 105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kronberg, P.P., 1985. In Active Galactic Nuclei , p.79, ed. Dyson, J.E., Manchester University Press, Manchester.Google Scholar
Liszt, H.S. & Burton, W.B., 1978. Astrophys. J. , 226, 790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liszt, H.S. & Burton, W.B., 1980. Astrophys. J. , 236, 779.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lo, K.Y., & Claussen, M.J., 1983. Nature , 306, 647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matsumoto, T., Hayakawa, S., Koizumi, H. & Murakami, H., 1982. In The Galactic Center, AIP Conf. No. 83, p.48, eds. Riegler, G.R. & Blandford, R.D., American Institute of Physics, New York.Google Scholar
Mulder, W.A., 1985. Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Leiden.Google Scholar
Oort, J.A., 1977. Ann. Rev. Astr. Astrophys. , 15, 295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oort, J.A., 1984. In The Milky Way Galaxy, IAU Symp. No. 106 , p349, eds. van Woerden, H., Allen, R. J., & Burton, W.B., Reidel, Dordrecht.Google Scholar
Ozernoy, L.M., 1977. IAU Colloq. No. 45 , 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinn, P.J., & Sussman, G.J., 1985. Astrophys. J. , 288, 377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, M.J., 1982. In The Galactic Center, AIP Conf. No. 83, p166, eds. Riegler, G.R. & Blandford, R.D., American Institute of Physics, New York.Google Scholar
Rees, M.J., 1988. Nature , 333, 523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rieke, G.H., & Rieke, M.J., 1988. Astrophys. J. , 330, L33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rougoor, G.W. & Oort, J.H., 1960. Proc. Nat Acad. Washington, D.C. , 46, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanders, R.H., 1981. Nature , 294, 427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanders, R.H. & Huntley, J.M., 1976. Astrophys. J. , 209, 53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanders, R.H. & Lowinger, T., 1972. Astr. J. , 77, 292.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanders, R.H. & Prendergast, K.H. 1974. Astrophys. J. , 188, 489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanders, R.H. & van Oosterom, W., 1984. Astr. Astrophys. , 131, 267.Google Scholar
Scoville, N.Z., 1972. Astrophys. J. , 175, L127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellwood, J.A. & Sanders, R.H. 1988. Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc. , 233, 611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sinha, R.P., 1978. Astr. Astrophys. , 69, 227.Google Scholar
Teuben, P.J., Sanders, R.H., Atherton, P.D. & van Albada, G.D., 1986. Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc. , 221, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Unger, S.W., Pedlar, A., Axon, D.J. & Wilkinson, P.N., 1985. In Active Galactic Nuclei , p73, ed. Dyson, J.E., Manchester University Press, Manchester.Google Scholar
van Woerden, H., Rougoor, G.W. & Oort, J.H., 1957. Comptes Rendes , 244, 1691.Google Scholar