Abstract. We present the data from a CO(J = 1 → 0) survey of the central region of our Galaxy. The observations were obtained with the 1.2-m Southern Millimeter-wave Telescope at Cerro Tololo Interamerican Observatory, Chile. This instrument has a full beam-width at half maximum (FWHM) of 8.8 at 115 GHz, the frequency of the observed transition. The survey covers a strip 4• wide in latitude along the galactic equator in the range −12• ≤ l ≤ +13• . The spatial sampling interval was 7.5 (0.85 beam-widths) for |b| ≤ 1• , and 15 (1.7 beamwidths) for 1• < |b| ≤ 2• . The velocity coverage allowed by the filterbank was of 333 km s −1 with a resolution of 1.3 km s −1 at 115 GHz. For the central few degrees (−4.5• < l ≤ 5 • ) where this velocity span was not wide enough, two spectra, taken with different velocities with respect to the local standard of rest (VLSR), were combined in order to cover the full range of the galactic center CO emission. The antenna temperature noise level of the spectra was ≤ 0.10 K (rms). The data are presented in a latitude-longitude spatial map and in sets of longitudevelocity and latitude-velocity diagrams. This survey combines the characteristics of being very sensitive and well sampled, and of having one of the widest and more homogeneous spatial coverage of the region within ∼ 2 kpc from the galactic center.
The discrepancy between observed and predicted γ-ray emission toward the Galactic Center is attributed to a unique population of wide-line molecular clouds. The most prominent objects of this class show evidence of rotation and a significant stellar population. The observed 12CO emission traces the gravitational field produced primarily by stars, not molecular gas.
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