Literature DB >> 23282363

Giant magnetized outflows from the centre of the Milky Way.

Ettore Carretti1, Roland M Crocker, Lister Staveley-Smith, Marijke Haverkorn, Cormac Purcell, B M Gaensler, Gianni Bernardi, Michael J Kesteven, Sergio Poppi.   

Abstract

The nucleus of the Milky Way is known to harbour regions of intense star formation activity as well as a supermassive black hole. Recent observations have revealed regions of γ-ray emission reaching far above and below the Galactic Centre (relative to the Galactic plane), the so-called 'Fermi bubbles'. It is uncertain whether these were generated by nuclear star formation or by quasar-like outbursts of the central black hole and no information on the structures' magnetic field has been reported. Here we report observations of two giant, linearly polarized radio lobes, containing three ridge-like substructures, emanating from the Galactic Centre. The lobes each extend about 60 degrees in the Galactic bulge, closely corresponding to the Fermi bubbles, and are permeated by strong magnetic fields of up to 15 microgauss. We conclude that the radio lobes originate in a biconical, star-formation-driven (rather than black-hole-driven) outflow from the Galaxy's central 200 parsecs that transports a huge amount of magnetic energy, about 10(55) ergs, into the Galactic halo. The ridges wind around this outflow and, we suggest, constitute a 'phonographic' record of nuclear star formation activity over at least ten million years.

Year:  2013        PMID: 23282363     DOI: 10.1038/nature11734

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  3 in total

1.  Discovery of very-high-energy gamma-rays from the Galactic Centre ridge.

Authors:  F Aharonian; A G Akhperjanian; A R Bazer-Bachi; M Beilicke; W Benbow; D Berge; K Bernlöhr; C Boisson; O Bolz; V Borrel; I Braun; F Breitling; A M Brown; P M Chadwick; L-M Chounet; R Cornils; L Costamante; B Degrange; H J Dickinson; A Djannati-Ataï; L O'C Drury; G Dubus; D Emmanoulopoulos; P Espigat; F Feinstein; G Fontaine; Y Fuchs; S Funk; Y A Gallant; B Giebels; S Gillessen; J F Glicenstein; P Goret; C Hadjichristidis; D Hauser; M Hauser; G Heinzelmann; G Henri; G Hermann; J A Hinton; W Hofmann; M Holleran; D Horns; A Jacholkowska; O C de Jager; B Khélifi; S Klages; Nu Komin; A Konopelko; I J Latham; R Le Gallou; A Lemière; M Lemoine-Goumard; N Leroy; T Lohse; A Marcowith; J M Martin; O Martineau-Huynh; C Masterson; T J L McComb; M de Naurois; S J Nolan; A Noutsos; K J Orford; J L Osborne; M Ouchrif; M Panter; G Pelletier; S Pita; G Pühlhofer; M Punch; B C Raubenheimer; M Raue; J Raux; S M Rayner; A Reimer; O Reimer; J Ripken; L Rob; L Rolland; G Rowell; V Sahakian; L Saugé; S Schlenker; R Schlickeiser; C Schuster; U Schwanke; M Siewert; H Sol; D Spangler; R Steenkamp; C Stegmann; J-P Tavernet; R Terrier; C G Théoret; M Tluczykont; C van Eldik; G Vasileiadis; C Venter; P Vincent; H J Völk; S J Wagner
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-02-09       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  A lower limit of 50 microgauss for the magnetic field near the Galactic Centre.

Authors:  Roland M Crocker; David I Jones; Fulvio Melia; Jürgen Ott; Raymond J Protheroe
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-01-07       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Fermi bubbles: giant, multibillion-year-old reservoirs of Galactic center cosmic rays.

Authors:  Roland M Crocker; Felix Aharonian
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  2011-03-11       Impact factor: 9.161

  3 in total
  1 in total

1.  On the distance to the North Polar Spur and the local CO-H2 factor.

Authors:  R Lallement; S Snowden; K D Kuntz; T M Dame; D Koutroumpa; I Grenier; J M Casandjian
Journal:  Astron Astrophys Suppl Ser       Date:  2016-11-17
  1 in total

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