Study of the excess Fe XXV line emission in the central degrees of the Galactic centre using XMM-Newton data
K. Anastasopoulou, G. Ponti, M. C. Sormani, N. Locatelli, F. Haberl,, M. R. Morris, E. M. Churazov, R. Sch\"odel, C. Maitra, S. Campana, E. M. Di, Teodoro, C. Jin, I. Khabibullin, S. Mondal, M. Sasaki, Y. Zhang, X. Zheng

TL;DR
This study analyzes Fe XXV line emission in the Galactic center using XMM-Newton data, finding excess emission likely due to hot plasma and stellar population effects, with implications for understanding high-energy phenomena in the region.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of Fe XXV emission in the Galactic center, quantifies excess emission beyond unresolved sources, and explores its origins including hot plasma and stellar metallicity effects.
Findings
Excess Fe XXV emission is 1.3 to 1.5 times higher than unresolved sources predict.
Most excess can be explained by higher iron abundance in stellar populations.
Remaining excess suggests presence of hot plasma with significant thermal energy.
Abstract
The diffuse Fe XXV (6.7 keV) line emission observed in the Galactic ridge is widely accepted to be produced by a superposition of a large number of unresolved X-ray point sources. In the very central degrees of our Galaxy, however, the existence of an extremely hot (7 keV) diffuse plasma is still under debate. In this work we measure the Fe XXV line emission using all available XMM-Newton observations of the Galactic centre (GC) and inner disc (, ). We use recent stellar mass distribution models to estimate the amount of X-ray emission originating from unresolved point sources, and find that within a region of and the 6.7 keV emission is 1.3 to 1.5 times in excess of what is expected from unresolved point sources. The excess emission is enhanced towards regions where known supernova…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Scientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
