Colliding Winds in and around the Stellar Group IRS 13E at the Galactic Center
Q. Daniel Wang, Jun Li, Christopher M. P. Russell, and Jorge Cuadra

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex interactions and X-ray emissions of the IRS 13E stellar group near the Galactic Center, revealing colliding stellar winds, environmental influences, and questioning the necessity of an intermediate-mass black hole.
Contribution
It provides a multi-wavelength analysis of IRS 13E, demonstrating that colliding stellar winds and environmental effects explain observed properties without requiring an IMBH.
Findings
X-ray emission characterized by thermal plasma
Colliding winds explain central X-ray peaks
Group interacts with surrounding gas mini-spiral
Abstract
IRS~13E is an enigmatic compact group of massive stars located in projection only 3.6 arcseconds away from Sgr A*. This group has been suggested to be bounded by an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH). We present a multi-wavelength study of the group and its interplay with the environment. Based on Chandra observations, we find the X-ray spectrum of IRS~13E can be well characterized by an optically thin thermal plasma. The emission peaks between two strongly mass-losing Wolf-Rayet stars of the group. These properties can be reasonably well reproduced by simulated colliding winds of these two stars. However, this scenario under-predicts the X-ray intensity in outer regions. The residual emission likely results from the ram-pressure confinement of the IRS~13E group wind by the ambient medium and is apparently associated with a shell-like warm gas structure seen in Pa-alpha and in ALMA…
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