Abstract
Using the Large Millimeter Telescope and the SEQUOIA 3 mm focal plane array, we have searched for molecular line emission from two atomic clouds associated with the Fermi Bubble of the Milky Way. Neither 12CO nor 13CO J=1a- 0 emission is detected from the H I cloud, MW-C20. 12CO J=1a- 0 emission is detected from MW-C21 that is distributed within 11 clumps with most of the CO luminosity coming from a single clump. However, we find no 13CO emission to a 3I σ brightness temperature limit of 0.3 K. Using this limit and RADEX non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE) excitation models, we derive H2 column density upper limits of (0.4a- 3)×1021 cm- 2 for a set of physical conditions and a H2 to 12CO abundance ratio of 104. Model CO-to-H2 conversion factors are derived for each set of physical conditions. We find the maximum value is 1.6×1020 cm- 2/(K km s- 1). Increasing [H2/12CO] to 105 to account for photodissociation and cosmic ray ionization increases the column density and X(CO) upper limits by a factor of 10. Applying these X(CO) limits to the CO luminosities, the upper limit on the total molecular mass in MW-C21 is 132±2 M⊙, corresponding to <27% of the neutral gas mass. For the three clumps that are fully resolved, lower limits to the virial ratios are 288±32, 68±28, and 157±39, which suggest that these structures are bound by external pressure to remain dynamically stable over the entrainment time of 2×106 years or are being disrupted by shear and expansion over the clump crossing times of 3- 8×105 years. The observations presented in this study add to the growing census of cold gas entrained within the Galactic Center wind.
Original language | English |
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Article number | A60 |
Journal | Astronomy and Astrophysics |
Volume | 695 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Mar 2025 |