Multiwavelength study of the flaring activity of Sgr A* in 2014 February-April
E. Mossoux, N. Grosso, H. Bushouse, A. Eckart, F. Yusef-Zadeh, R. L., Plambeck, F. Peissker, M. Valencia-S., D. Porquet, W. D. Cotton, D. A., Roberts

TL;DR
This study presents a multiwavelength analysis of Sgr A*'s flaring activity in 2014, revealing detailed flare characteristics and their timing, with no observed increase in activity near the DSO/G2 pericenter passage.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous multiwavelength observations of Sgr A* flares during 2014, analyzing their properties and testing models of flare origin and emission mechanisms.
Findings
Detected 7 NIR flares, 3 with X-ray counterparts.
No increase in flaring activity near DSO/G2 pericenter.
X-ray flaring rate consistent with previous campaigns.
Abstract
The supermassive black hole Sgr A* is located at the Milky Way center. We studied its flaring activity close to the DSO/G2 pericenter passage to constrain the physical properties and origin of the flares. Simultaneous/coordinated observations were made in 2014 Feb-Apr with XMM-Newton, HST/WFC3, VLT/SINFONI, VLA and CARMA. We detected 2 X-ray and 3 NIR flares on Mar. 10 and Apr. 2 with XMM-Newton and HST and 2 NIR flares on Apr. 3 and 4 with VLT. The Mar. 10 X-ray flare has a long rise and a rapid decay. Its NIR counterpart peaked 4320s before the X-ray peak implying a variation in the X-ray-to-NIR flux ratio. This flare may be a single flare where change in the flux ratio is explained by the adiabatic compression of a plasmon or 2 close flares with simultaneous X-ray/NIR peaks. We observed an increase in the rising radio flux density on Mar. 10 with the VLA. It could be the delayed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
