Fe Ka line emission from the Arches cluster region - evidence for ongoing particle bombardment?
R. Capelli, R.S. Warwick, D. Porquet, S. Gillessen, P. Predehl

TL;DR
This study analyzes eight years of X-ray observations of the Arches cluster region, revealing that Fe-Ka line emission is mostly due to photoionization, with some evidence of cosmic-ray bombardment and transient X-ray illumination.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the origin of Fe-Ka emission in the Galactic Center, combining spatial, spectral, and temporal analysis to distinguish between photoionization and cosmic-ray excitation mechanisms.
Findings
Fe-Ka line emission is mostly constant near the cluster, with some variability west of it.
No strong evidence of the 7.1-keV Fe edge feature was found in the spectra.
Short-term variability suggests transient X-ray sources influence some clouds.
Abstract
We present the results of eight years of XMM-Newton observations of the region surrounding the Arches cluster in the Galactic Center. We study the spatial distribution and temporal behaviour of the Fe-Ka line emission with the objective of identifying the likely source of the excitation. We investigate the variability of the 6.4-keV line emission of four clouds through spectral fitting of the EPIC MOS data with the use of a modelled background, which avoids many of the systematics inherent in local background subtraction. We also employ spectral stacking of both EPIC PN and MOS data to search for evidence of an Fe-K edge feature imprinted on the underlying X-ray continuum. The lightcurves of the Fe-Ka line from three bright molecular knots close to the Arches cluster are found to be constant over the 8-year observation window. West of the cluster, however, we found a bright cloud…
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