Nonthermal X-rays from low-energy cosmic rays: Application to the 6.4 keV line emission from the Arches cluster region
Vincent Tatischeff, Anne Decourchelle, Gilles Maurin

TL;DR
This study investigates nonthermal X-ray emission caused by low-energy cosmic rays, particularly focusing on the 6.4 keV iron line in the Arches cluster, and models its origin to identify cosmic-ray signatures in X-ray spectra.
Contribution
It provides detailed models of nonthermal X-ray production by cosmic-ray ions and applies these to observations of the Arches cluster, highlighting cosmic rays as the likely source of the 6.4 keV emission.
Findings
6.4 keV emission likely caused by cosmic-ray ions, not electrons
Best-fit ambient metallicity is 1.7 times solar
Potential gamma-ray emission detectable by Fermi telescope
Abstract
The iron line at 6.4 keV provides a valuable spectral diagnostic in several fields of X-ray astronomy. It often results from the reprocessing of external X-rays by a neutral or low-ionized medium, but it can also be excited by impacts of low-energy cosmic rays. This paper aims to provide signatures allowing identification of radiation from low-energy cosmic rays in X-ray spectra showing the 6.4 keV line. We study in detail the production of nonthermal line and continuum X-rays by interaction of accelerated electrons and ions with a neutral ambient gas. Corresponding models are then applied to XMM-Newton observations of the X-ray emission emanating from the Arches cluster region near the Galactic center. Bright 6.4 keV line structures are observed around the Arches cluster. This emission is very likely produced by cosmic rays. We find that it can result from the bombardment of molecular…
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