An X-ray survey of the central molecular zone: variability of the Fe Ka emission line
R. Terrier, M. Clavel, S. Soldi, A. Goldwurm, G. Ponti, M. R. Morris,, D. Chuard

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray observations to analyze the variability of Fe Kα emission in the Galactic Center, suggesting multiple short-lived outbursts of the supermassive black hole rather than a single long-duration event.
Contribution
It provides a detailed temporal and spatial analysis of Fe Kα emission variability, constraining the history of SMBH activity in the Galactic Center.
Findings
Most regions show decreased emission from 2000-2001 to 2012.
No evidence for a multi-centennial illumination event.
Variability indicates multiple short-duration outbursts.
Abstract
There is now abundant evidence that the luminosity of the Galactic super-massive black hole (SMBH) has not always been as low as it is nowadays. The observation of varying non-thermal diffuse X-ray emission in molecular complexes in the central 300 pc has been interpreted as delayed reflection of a past illumination by bright outbursts of the SMBH. The observation of different variability timescales of the reflected emission in the Sgr A molecular complex can be well explained if the X-ray emission of at least two distinct and relatively short events (i.e. about 10 years or less) is currently propagating through the region. The number of such events or the presence of a long-duration illumination are open questions. Variability of the reflected emission all over of the central 300 pc, in particular in the 6.4 keV Fe Ka line, can bring strong constraints. To do so we performed a deep…
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