A broad linewidth, compact, millimeter-bright molecular emission line source near the Galactic Center
Abstract
A compact source, G0.02467-0.0727, was detected in ALMA observations in continuum and very broad line emission. The continuum emission has a spectral index α≈3.3, suggesting that the emission is from dust. The line emission is detected in several transitions of CS, SO, and SO2 and exhibits a line width FWHM ≈160 . The line profile appears Gaussian. The emission is weakly spatially resolved, coming from an area on the sky 1" in diameter (104 AU at the distance of the Galactic Center; GC). The centroid velocity is vLSR≈40-50 , which is consistent with a location in the Galactic Center. With multiple SO lines detected, and assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) conditions, TLTE = 13 K, which is colder than seen in typical GC clouds, though we cannot rule out low-density, subthermally excited, warmer gas. Despite the high velocity dispersion, no emission is observed from SiO, suggesting that there are no strong (10~km~s-1) shocks in the molecular gas. There are no detections at other wavelengths, including X-ray, infrared, and radio. We consider several explanations for the Millimeter Ultra-Broad Line Object (MUBLO), including protostellar outflow, explosive outflow, collapsing cloud, evolved star, stellar merger, high-velocity compact cloud, intermediate mass black hole, and background galaxy. Most of these conceptual models are either inconsistent with the data or do not fully explain it. The MUBLO is, at present, an observationally unique object.
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