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We have observed the Galactic Center (GC) region at 0.154 and 0.255 GHz with the GMRT. A total of 62 compact likely extragalactic sources are detected. Their scattering sizes go down linearly with increasing angular distance from the GC up to about 1 deg. The apparent scattering sizes of sources are more than an order of magnitude down than predicted earlier by the NE2001 model of Galactic electron distribution within 359.5 deg < l < 0.5 deg and -0.5 deg <b <0.5 deg (Hyperstrong scattering region) of the Galaxy. High free-free optical depths are observed towards most of the extended nonthermal sources within 0.6 deg from the GC. Significant variation of optical depth indicate the absorbing medium is patchy at an angular scale of 10 and electron density is ~10 per cc that matches with the NE2001 model. This model predicts the extragalactic (EG) sources to be resolved out from 1.4 GHz interferometric surveys. However, 8 likely EG sources out of 10 expected in the region are present in 1.4 GHz catalog. Ionized interfaces of dense molecular clouds to the ambient medium are most likely responsible for strong scattering and low radio frequency absorption. However, dense GC clouds traced by CS $J=1-0$ emission are found to have a narrow distribution of ~0.2 deg across the Galactic plane. Angular distribution of most of the EG sources seen through the so called Hyperstrong scattering region are random in $b$, and typically ~7 out of 10 sources will not be seen through to the dense molecular clouds, and it explains why most of them are not scatter broadened at 1.4 GHz.
We detected a compact ionized gas associated physically with IRS13E3, an Intermediate Mass Black Hole (IMBH) candidate in the Galactic Center, in the continuum emission at 232 GHz and H30$alpha$ recombination line using ALMA Cy.5 observation (2017.1.
We report the detection of a new radio transient source, GCRT J1746-2757, located only 1.1 degrees north of the Galactic center. Consistent with other radio transients toward the Galactic center, this source brightened and faded on a time scale of a
In 2011, we discovered a compact gas cloud (G2) with roughly three Earth masses that is falling on a near-radial orbit toward the massive black hole in the Galactic Center. The orbit is well constrained and pericenter passage is predicted for early 2
We present 168 arcmin^2 spectral images of the Sgr B2 complex taken with Herschel/SPIRE-FTS. We detect ubiquitous emission from CO (up to J=12-11), H2O, [CI]492, 809 GHz, and [NII] 205 um lines. We also present maps of the SiO, N2H+, HCN, and HCO+ em
We present new observations of the recently discovered gas cloud G2 currently falling towards the massive black hole in the Galactic Center. The new data confirm that G2 is on a highly elliptical orbit with a predicted pericenter passage mid 2013. Th