Chandra-HETGS Observations of the Brightest Flare Seen from Sgr A*
M. A. Nowak, J. Neilsen, S. B. Markoff, F. K. Baganoff, D. Porquet, N., Grosso, Y. Levin, J. Houck, A. Eckart, H. Falcke, L. Ji, J. M. Miller, Q. D., Wang

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation of the brightest X-ray flare from Sgr A* using Chandra, providing detailed spectral analysis and comparison with previous flares to enhance understanding of black hole activity.
Contribution
First high-resolution spectral measurement of Sgr A*'s quiescent emission and detailed analysis of its most intense flare to date, comparing with prior XMM-Newton observations.
Findings
Detected the highest peak flux flare from Sgr A* with Chandra.
Spectral slopes and absorption columns consistent across major flares.
Resolved previous discrepancies between Chandra and XMM-Newton flare observations.
Abstract
Starting in 2012, we began an unprecedented observational program focused on the supermassive black hole in the center of our Galaxy, Sgr A*, utilizing the High Energy Transmission Gratings Spectrometer (HETGS) instrument on the Chandra X-ray Observatory. These observations will allow us to measure the quiescent X-ray spectra of Sgr A* for the first time at both high spatial and spectral resolution. The X-ray emission of Sgr A*, however, is known to flare roughly daily by factors of a few to ten times over quiescent emission levels, with rarer flares extending to factors of greater than 100 times quiescence. Here were report an observation performed on 2012 February 9 wherein we detected what is the highest peak flux and fluence flare ever observed from Sgr A*. The flare, which lasted for 5.6 ks and had a decidedly asymmetric profile with a faster decline than rise, achieved a mean…
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