Reflection nebulae in the Galactic Center: the case for soft X-ray imaging polarimetry
F. Marin, F. Muleri, P. Soffitta, V. Karas, and D. Kunneriath

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how soft X-ray imaging polarimetry can reveal the history and structure of the Galactic Center by modeling polarization signatures of molecular clouds and reflection nebulae.
Contribution
It introduces a Monte Carlo simulation approach to predict polarization maps of the Galactic Center, accounting for diffuse plasma emission and assessing target suitability for polarimetric observations.
Findings
Sgr B and Sgr C are promising targets for polarization detection.
Diffuse plasma emission significantly dilutes polarization signals.
A few hundred kilo-seconds observation of Sgr B could reveal polarization signatures.
Abstract
The origin of irradiation and fluorescence of the 6.4 keV bright giant molecular clouds surrounding Sgr A*, the central supermassive black hole of our Galaxy, remains enigmatic. Testing the theory of a past active period of Sgr A* requires X-ray polarimetry. In this paper, we show how modern imaging polarimeters could revolutionize our understanding of the Galactic Center. Through Monte Carlo modeling, we produce a 4-8 keV polarization map of the Galactic Center, focusing on the polarimetric signature produced by Sgr B1, Sgr B2, G0.11-0.11, Bridge E, Bridge D, Bridge B2, MC2, MC1, Sgr C3, Sgr C2, and Sgr C1. We estimate the resulting polarization, include polarized flux dilution by the diffuse plasma emission detected toward the GC, and simulate the polarization map that modern polarimetric detectors would obtain assuming the performances of a mission prototype. The eleven reflection…
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