The XMM-Newton view of the central degrees of the Milky Way
G. Ponti, M. R. Morris, R. Terrier, F. Haberl, R. Sturm, M. Clavel, S., Soldi, A. Goldwurm, P. Predehl, K. Nandra, G. Belanger, R. S. Warwick, V., Tatischeff

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed X-ray survey of the Milky Way's central region using XMM-Newton, revealing new extended features, supernova remnants, and insights into the Galactic center's hot plasma and outflows.
Contribution
It provides the deepest X-ray mosaic of the Galactic center, identifying new structures and proposing interpretations for features like Sgr A's bipolar lobes and the hot plasma distribution.
Findings
Discovery of new supernova remnants and filaments.
Identification of a candidate superbubble around G0.1-0.1.
Observation of hot plasma features correlating with known IR structures.
Abstract
The deepest XMM-Newton mosaic map of the central 1.5 deg of the Galaxy is presented, including a total of about 1.5 Ms of EPIC-pn cleaned exposures in the central 15" and about 200 ks outside. This compendium presents broad-band X-ray continuum maps, soft X-ray intensity maps, a decomposition into spectral components and a comparison of the X-ray maps with emission at other wavelengths. Newly-discovered extended features, such as supernova remnants (SNRs), superbubbles and X-ray filaments are reported. We provide an atlas of extended features within +-1 degree of Sgr A*. We discover the presence of a coherent X-ray emitting region peaking around G0.1-0.1 and surrounded by the ring of cold, mid-IR-emitting material known from previous work as the "Radio Arc Bubble" and with the addition of the X-ray data now appears to be a candidate superbubble. Sgr A's bipolar lobes show sharp edges,…
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