Effects of Turbulence in the Circumnuclear Disk

A circumnuclear disk (CND) of molecular gas occupies the central few parsecs of the Galactic Center. It is likely subject to turbulent disruptions from violent events in its surrounding environment, but the effect of such perturbations has not yet been investigated in detail. Here we perform 3D, N -...

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Published inThe Astrophysical journal Vol. 920; no. 2; pp. 79 - 93
Main Authors Dinh, Cuc K., Salas, Jesus M., Morris, Mark R., Naoz, Smadar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia The American Astronomical Society 01.10.2021
IOP Publishing
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Summary:A circumnuclear disk (CND) of molecular gas occupies the central few parsecs of the Galactic Center. It is likely subject to turbulent disruptions from violent events in its surrounding environment, but the effect of such perturbations has not yet been investigated in detail. Here we perform 3D, N -body/smoothed particle hydrodynamic simulations with an adapted general turbulence driving method to investigate the CND’s structural evolution, in particular its reaction to varied scales of injected turbulence. We find that, because of shear flow in the disk, transient arcs of gas (streams) naturally arise when turbulence is driven on large scales (up to ∼4 pc), as might occur when a supernova blast wave encounters the CND. Because energetic events arise naturally and often in the central parsecs of our Galaxy, this result suggests that the transient structures that characterize the CND do not imply that the CND itself is a transient structure. We also note that features similar to the density concentrations, or clumps , detailed in the literature emerge when we account for the observed orientation of the disk and for the spatial resolution of observations. As such, clumps could be an artifact of observational limitations.
Bibliography:AAS30461
Interstellar Matter and the Local Universe
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/ac185b