Title: ASTRO Survey of the Galactic Center Region
1The Case for a 30 meter Sub-mm Telescope on the
Antarctic Plateau
Antony A. Stark Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory
2Search for Protogalaxies
- The study of galaxy formation is emerging as a
dominant theme for astronomy in the 21st Century. - One of the fundamental problems in this field is
finding the protogalaxies. - Many instruments and surveys dedicated to finding
protogalaxies over regions of a few square
degrees (Maps of the Cosmos) - Once found, the suite of existing or planned
telescopes can study them - ALMA, SMA
- Keck, Gemini, Magellan, OWL, etc.
3Size of Protogalaxies
In q0 ½ Universe, essentially all protogalaxies
are at an angular diameter distance of 109
parsecs.
This means that a 20 kpc region appears to be 4?
in diameter
4Protogalaxy Spectra
Telescope curves and points give sensitivity
limits in one hour with one detector element
30 m at SP
5Fields of View of Sub-mm Telescopes
(SPT will actually have a field of view about
2000 sq. arcmin)
6ALMA cant find them all
- An ALMA map is small there are 50,000 ALMA maps
per square degree. - (thats maps, not beams)
- At 450µm wavelength, 3 minutes of ALMA observing
time gives 1 mJy sensitivity. - (thats really fast, but)
- 100 days of observing time to survey one square
degree. - So if ALMA were dedicated to a protogalaxy survey
for 10 years, it would cover 10-3 of the sky
730 m Telescope can find them all
- 3.5? beam at 350µm
- well-coupled to entire protogalaxy
- Also requires about 3 minutes to achieve 1
mJy/beam sensitivity - smaller collecting area but bigger bandwidth
- A 10,000 bolometer detector array will cover 1
square degree in about an hour - about 20 array centers per square degree
8Speed of Radio Mapping
- Searching for point-like sources with a
radiotelescope at fixed flux level - survey speed ? nAB Tsys-2
- n total number of detectors
- A total collecting area
- B pre-detection bandwidth
- Tsys total, atmosphere-corrected
system temperature
9Comparison between telescopes for protogalaxy
survey speed
10Telescope Design
- IRAM 30 m diameter mm-wave telescope operates at
2 mm wavelength with passive optics - Need factor of 5 boost in surface accuracy
- Achievable with modest active surface technology
(simplified Keck design) - On-axis design is OK.
- Cost about 120M
11THE END
12The AST/RO Survey of the Galactic Center Region
Antony A. Stark Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory
13AST/RO Survey Collaborators
- Tony Stark (SAO)
- PI
- Adair Lane (SAO)
- Project Manager
- Richard Chamberlin (CSO)
- Co-I
- Jacob Kooi (Caltech)
- Co-I
- Chris Walker (Steward Obs.)
- Co-I
- Jürgen Stutzki (U. Köln)
- Co-I
- Chris Martin (SAO)
- Winterover First Author
- Karina Leppik
- Current Winterover
- Wilfred Walsh
- Winterover in 2002
- Kecheng Xiao
- Winterover in 2002
- Nicholas Tothill
- Winterover in 2004
- Sunguen Kim (U. Mass)
- PostDoc
14- AST/RO submm-wave Telescope
- Full suite of submm-wave receivers
- First telescope to operate through the Austral
Winter
15AST/RO
- Submm telescope operations year-round on
Antarctic Plateau - AST/RO has more usable submillimeter-wave
observing weather than any other observatory - Comprehensive characterization of South Pole
submillimeter sky - Open to proposals from worldwide astronomical
community - Receivers operating at 230 GHz, 460-500 GHz, 810
GHz, 1.4 THz - Large-scale maps of CO 2-1, 4-3, 7-6, and
fine-structure lines of C I dominant cooling
lines of molecular gas - LVG modeling of density and temperature
- Molecular cloud structure as function of
metallicity and spiral arm phase - AST/RO observes the Milky Way and Magellanic
Clouds as ALMA will observe other galaxies.
16AST/RO on the roof
- AST/RO submm-wave Telescope
- Full suite of submm-wave receivers
17AST/RO Instruments
- Receivers
- 230 GHz (CO 2?1)
- Wanda
- 460-495 GHz (CO 4?3, CI 3P1?3P0)
- 800-810 GHz (CO 7?6, CI 3P2?3P1)
- Polestar, 2x2 array Rx _at_ 800-810 GHz (CO 7?6,CI
3P2?3P1) - TREND, 1.5 THz Rx (NII, CO 11-10)
- Fourier Transform Spectrometers 1 MHz and 60 KHz
wide
18Galactic Center SurveyC. Martin, W. Walsh, K.
Xiao, A. Lane, C. Walker, and A.
Starkastro-ph/0211025
- -1.3ltllt2.0, -0.3ltblt0.2, with 0.5' spacing
- 3 transitions
- CO 7-6 (807 GHz) beamsize 1'
- CO 4-3 (461 GHz) beamsize 2'
- C I 3P1-3P0 (492 GHz) beamsize 2'
- 24,000 spectra per transition
- 108 pixels in three data cubes
19AST/RO Data Release
- These data are feely-available on Internet see
- www.tonystark.org
- FITS data cubes of three species
20Data Cubes
- Galactic Center
- CI (3P1-3P0)
- CO (4-3)
- CO (7-6)
21LB Movie
22LV Movie
23(No Transcript)
24Notation for line ratios
- The antenna temperature of the J n?m line of
the k molecular weight isotope is - Tn?mk
- So the ratio of antenna temperatures of 13CO
(J1?0) - to 12CO (J4?3) is
- T1?013/T4?312
25- Some line ratios are more useful than others.
- The excitation states of the CO molecule tend to
be in approximate Local Thermodynamic
Equilibrium in almost all molecular gas almost
everywhere. - This means that transitions between the low-J
states of CO have approximately the same antenna
temperature. Furthermore, that temperature
cannot in general be determined, because the beam
filling factor is some unknown value less than
unity. - T2?112/T1?012 1 almost everywhere in the
Galaxy, and therefore carries little information
about ordinary molecular clouds
26- To determine the excitation temperature, observe
CO transitions from mid-J states. At some
energy, the population of the states will drop
out of Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium. This
effect is sensitive to excitation temperature. - The transitions between mid-J states are at
submillimeter wavelengthsthats where AST/RO
comes in.
27Line ratio maps
- Black and white areas indicate no data
- Some areas show remarkably uniform color
- Foreground regions show distinctly different
color from galactic center material
28LVG Estimate of Density and Temperature
T1?013/ T1?012 is a measure of optical depth.
temperature (K)
T7?612/ T4?312 is a measure of excitation.
log(density)
LVG modeling with these lines gives an estimate
of temperature and density, over some range of
validity.
This is a significant advance in studying the
properties of molecular gas on the large scale.
29LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
Sgr B
x2 orbits
Sgr A
x1 orbits
30LVG Movie
31Measuring Molecular Gas
- In millimeter-wave astronomy it is often assumed
that the brightness of 12CO J1?0 is a measure of
total molecular mass. - Such estimates are central to all observations of
star-forming gas. - Adding submillimeter-wave data, and analyzing
using LVG method gives significantly different
results. - Variations in excitation
- Variations in column density
32Integrate density over velocity to get column
density
This does not look like 12CO J1?0!
LVG-derived column density/T1?012
33Progress in Observations of Star-forming regions
- LVG analyses can be cross-checked
- Add data from more CO transitions
- 13CO J6?5 at 660 GHz is particularly important
measure of optical depth - Fully-constrain or over-constrain CO radiative
transfer models - Determine velocity gradient
- Determine abundances
34x1 and x2 closed orbits in a bar-like
potential
x1 orbit (solid)
x2 orbit (dashed)
35x1 and x2 closed orbits an explanation for gas
velocities in the galactic center
- Bar-like potential in the inner 4 kpc of the
Galaxy - Our line-of-sight is about 15 from end-on
- x1 orbits form parallelogram
- x2 orbits lie on diagonal line
line-of-sight from Earth
36x1 and x2 orbits in the Milky Way
37Gas Flow and Stability in x2 Orbits
- Gas flows down potential well of inner galaxy
- Gas will accumulate in the outer x2 orbits in a
ring - Elmegreen (1994, ApJL 425L73) showed that this
ring is stable until - ? gt ?crit 0.6 ?2/G 7 103 mH cm-3
- in the Milky Way, where ? is the epicyclic
frequency
38LVG Movie
7 103 mH cm-3
39Starburst Mechanism in our Galactic Center
- Gas flows down potential well in the bar of our
Galaxy until it reaches the x2 orbit which
coincides with the innermost x1 orbit. - There it accumulates until ?crit is reached.
- Then it will coagulate into a few giant clouds.
- These clouds will cause a starburst.
40Summary
- Large submillimeter-wave line survey of the
Galactic center is available. - Modeling of line ratios yields estimate of
density and temperature of molecular gas. - Resulting density is suggestive of a starburst
mechanism for the Milky Way.
41THE END
42LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
43LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
44LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
Sgr A
45LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
Sgr B
Sgr A
46LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
Sgr B
Sgr A
x2 orbits
47LVG model of Galactic Center CO Emission
- Large Velocity Gradient
- Models are robust
- Inputs to our model
- 12CO/13CO abundance 25
- 12CO/H2 abundance 104
- ?v 4 km s1 pc 1
- Model results can be inverted to estimate
temperature and density of emitting gas.
Sgr B
Sgr A
x2 orbits
x1 orbits
48AST/RO Observations of CO J 7?6 and J 4 ?
3 in the Galactic Center Region
- The 300 pc ring density is just below a critical
threshold for coagulation into a GMC like Sgr B,
which will spiral into the center and cause a
starburst - Foreground spiral arms appear in absorption
- Most of galactic center region has CO excitation
temperature near 35 K - Sgr A and Sgr B are denser and more highly
excited than GC as a whole
49AST/RO Observations of CO 4?3 and CO 7 ? 6 in the
Galactic Center Region
- Sunguen Kim et al. 2002
- Longitude-velocity strip at b 0
- CO 4?3 is similar to CO 1?0
- Note absorption caused by
- Spiral arm near the Sun at vLSR ? 0 km s1
- 3 Kpc arm at vLSR ? 50 km s1
- CO 7?6 emission arises primarily in Sgr A and Sgr
B clouds - C I emission occurs in LSB
50Bell Labs 7m Antenna Observations of Galactic
Center Gas at b 0º
- Note foreground absorption by local spiral arm
and 3 kpc arm in CO map. - There are some localized features with extremely
broad linewidths, for example Clump 2 at l 3 - CS emission from dense material
51AST/RO Data Release
- Open to proposals worldwide
- cfa-www.harvard.edu/adair/AST?RO
- Receivers at 230 GHz, 460 GHz, 490 GHz, 806 GHz
- Spectrometer resolution 1 MHz and 60 KHz
- PoleSTAR receiver (4 ? 806 GHz array receiver and
array AOS) is operational (C. Walker, U.
Arizona)
52In the Galactic Center, excitation temperature is
similar for all CO states up to J 4
53CO 4?3 and CO 7?6 in the Galactic Centertheir
ratio varies
C I
C I