Study of the X-ray activity of Sgr A* during the 2011 XMM-Newton campaign
Enmanuelle Mossoux (Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg), Nicolas, Grosso (Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg), Fr\'ed\'eric H. Vincent, (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center), Delphine Porquet (Observatoire, Astronomique de Strasbourg)

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray flares from Sgr A* during a 2011 XMM-Newton campaign, detecting two significant flares, modeling their light curves, and estimating the flare regions' locations relative to the black hole.
Contribution
First detailed timing analysis of Sgr A* X-ray flares during the 2011 campaign using Bayesian blocks, with modeling and localization of flare emission regions.
Findings
Detected 2 X-ray flares with high significance.
Modeled flare light curves with gravitational lensing and magnetic heating.
Estimated flare emission regions at 4-100 r_g from the black hole.
Abstract
In Spring 2011 we observed Sgr A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy, with XMM-Newton with a total exposure of ~226 ks in coordination with the 1.3 mm VLBI. We have performed timing analysis of the X-ray emission from Sgr A* using Bayesian blocks algorithm to detect X-ray flares observed with XMM-Newton. Furthermore, we computed X-ray smoothed light curves observed in this campaign in order to have better accuracy on the position and the amplitude of the flares. We detected 2 X-ray flares on the 2011 March 30 and April 3 which have for comparison a peak detection level of 6.8 and 5.9 sigma in the XMM-Newton/EPIC light curve in the 2-10 keV energy range with a 300 s bin. The former is characterized by 2 sub-flares: the first one is very short (~458 s) with a peak luminosity of ~9.4E34 erg/s whereas the second one is longer (~1542 s) with a lower peak luminosity of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
