Far Infrared Observations of the Galactic Center

Author: Gatley, Ian

Year: 1978

Degree: Dissertation (Ph.D.)

Advisors: Neugebauer, Gerry; Becklin, Eric E.; Werner, Michael W.

Committee Member: Unknown, Unknown

Option: Physics

DOI: 10.7907/p847-1d03

Abstract

Maps of a region 10' in diameter around the galactic center made simultaneously in three wavelength bands at 30 μm, 50 μm, and 100 μm with ~ 1' resolution are presented, and the distribution of far infrared luminosity and color temperature across this region is derived. The position of highest far infrared surface brightness coincides with the peak of the late-type stellar distribution and with the H II region Sgr A West. The high spatial and temperature resolution of the data is used to identify features of the far infrared maps with known sources of near infrared, radio continuum, and molecular emission. The emission mechanism and energy sources for the far infrared radiation are analyzed qualitatively, and it is concluded that all of the observed far infrared radiation from the galactic center region can be attributed to thermal emission from dust heated both by the late-type stars and by the ultraviolet sources which ionize the H II regions. A self-consistent model for the far infrared emission from the galactic center region is presented. It is found that the visual extinction across the central 10 pc of the Galaxy is only about 3 magnitudes, and that the dust density is fairly uniform in this region. An upper limit of 107 L is set on the luminosity of any presently unidentified source of 0.1 to 1 μm radiation at the galactic center.

Additional maps in the vicinity of the source Sgr B2 and observations of Sgr C bring the total number of H II regions within 1° of the galactic center studied by the present experiment to nine. The far infrared luminosity, color temperature and optical depth of these regions and the ratio of infrared flux to radio continuum flux lie in the range characteristic of spiral arm H II regions. The far infrared results are therefore consistent with the idea that the galactic center H II regions are ionized by luminous, early type stars. Steep, systematic gradients in far infrared color temperature and optical depth are seen along the galactic plane between Sgr B2 and G0.5-0.0; the appearance of this area is similar to that of regions of star formation in the spiral arms.

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