Anatomy of the Sagittarius A complex: IV. Sgr A* and the Central Cavity revisi- ted

Abstract

We present submm images of Sgr A* and its surroundings obtained at 800, 600 and 450 μm with the JCMT and derive flux densities of Sgr A* at all three wave- lengths. Combined with upper limits by Gezari and associates at MIR wavelengths a time averaged radio spectrum is obtained which increases ν1/3, attains a maximum at νmax 600 GHz and must decrease rapidly at fre- quencies 104GHz. This spectrum allows for about 3 M of 50K dust and associated hydrogen in the telescope beam. While variations on time-scales of a few months are now well established for the frequency range ν 100 GHz, our investigation of variability at higher frequencies still yields only marginal results. The Circum-Nuclear Disk (CND) extends over the central 12 pc. At the galactocentric radius R 1 pc dust and hydrogen column densities drop to low values and form the Central Cavity. Our submm images show that the bottom of this cavity is rather flat. Variations in the dust emission are just consistent with the detection of a `Tongue' of 200 M of atomic hydrogen reported by Jackson et al. (1993) to be located between the Northern and the Eastern Arm of the Minispiral. We present a revised submm/IR spectrum of the central 30 (R 0.6 pc) with flux densities corrected for an interstellar extinction of Av 31 mag. This spectrum attains its maximum at λ 20 μm and comes from dust with temperatures 170 - 400 K which is associated with the Eastern Arm and the East-West Bar. The in- tegrated luminosity is 5 106 L to which emission at λ 30 μm contributes 80\%. Heating of this dust is not provided by a central source but rather by a cluster of hot (T eff 3 - 3.5 104 K) and luminous stars which could include the He i/H i-stars detected by

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