Inventory of the Galactic Center
How do we study the center of the Galaxy?
-
28 magnitudes of optical extinction -- can't
do it in visible light
-
infrared emission
(2.2
microns - K band)
-
much less obscured
-
old Population I red giants (T ~ 4000 K) are
brightest in
the infrared.
-
radio emission
-
unobscured
-
not emission from stars
-
non-thermal emission (synchrotron emission,
supernovae, etc)
At the distance of the Galactic Center, 1" is about
0.05
parsecs.
What do we see?
A rising density of stars towards the center: n
~ r-2 from 1 parsec to 0.1 parsec. Stars are very
close together, so close interactions are common.
Lots of non-thermal
synchrotron
radio emission:
The brightest radio source is
called
Sagittarius A
(Sgr A). Sgr A is not a single object, but a complex region at the
center
of the Galaxy.
-
Sgr A East
is most-likely a recent supernovae remnant (again, perhaps suggesting a
recent starburst?).
-
Sgr A West
is a bizarre HII region which shows a mini-spiral pattern:
-
Sgr A*
is a very bright, compact radio source located in the center of Sgr A
West.