Diffuse Gamma-ray Emission from the Galactic Center - A Multiple Energy Injection Model
K. S. Cheng, D. O. Chernyshov, V. A. Dogiel

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where episodic star captures by the Galactic black hole Sgr A* produce relativistic protons that generate diffuse gamma-ray emission through proton-proton collisions, aligning with observed GeV gamma-ray data.
Contribution
It introduces a multiple energy injection model linking stellar captures to gamma-ray emission, explaining observed diffuse gamma-rays from the Galactic center.
Findings
Model explains GeV gamma-ray intensities consistent with EGRET and INTEGRAL data.
Relativistic protons can diffuse over 500 pc before losing energy.
Inflight annihilation rate insufficient to explain COMPTEL observations.
Abstract
We suggest that the energy source of the observed diffuse gamma-ray emission from the direction of the Galactic center is the Galactic black hole Sgr A*, which becomes active when a star is captured at a rate of yr^{-1}. Subsequently the star is tidally disrupted and its matter is accreted into the black hole. During the active phase relativistic protons with a characteristic energy erg per capture are ejected. Over 90% of these relativistic protons disappear due to proton-proton collisions on a timescale years in the small central bulge region with radius pc within Sgr A*, where the density is cm^{-3}. The gamma-ray intensity, which results from the decay of neutral pions produced by proton-proton collisions, decreases according to , where t is the time after last stellar capture. Less…
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