XMM-Newton observations of the Galactic Centre Region - II: The soft thermal emission
V. Heard, R. S. Warwick

TL;DR
This study investigates soft X-ray emissions from the Galactic Centre, identifying thermal structures and proposing origins such as stellar winds, supernova remnants, and possible superbubbles, enhancing understanding of the region's energetic phenomena.
Contribution
The paper extends previous work to analyze specific soft X-ray features, proposing new interpretations for their origins and interactions in the Galactic Centre.
Findings
All three structures are thermal with similar temperatures (~1 keV).
The bipolar outflow may result from stellar wind shock-heating or Sgr A* outbursts.
The NE enhancement likely indicates a new supernova remnant interacting with a molecular cloud.
Abstract
We have extended our earlier study (Heard & Warwick 2013, Paper I) of the X-ray emission emanating from the central 100 pc x 100 pc region of our Galaxy to an investigation of several features prominent in the soft X-ray (2-4.5 keV) band. We focus on three specific structures: a putative bipolar outflow from the vicinity of Sgr A*; a high surface brightness region located roughly 12 arcmin to the north-east of Sgr A*; and a lower surface-brightness extended loop feature seen to the south of Sgr A*. We show that all three structures are thermal in nature and have similar temperatures (kT ~ 1 keV). The inferred X-ray luminosities lie in the range (2 - 10) x 10^34 erg s^-1. In the case of the bipolar feature we suggest that the hot plasma is produced by the shock-heating of the winds from massive stars within the Central Cluster, possibly collimated by the Circumnuclear Disc. Alternatively…
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