1. Sgr B2 hard X-ray emission with INTEGRAL after 2009: still detectable?
- Author
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Kuznetsova, Ekaterina, Krivonos, Roman, Lutovinov, Alexander, and Clavel, Maïca
- Subjects
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HARD X-rays , *X-ray astronomy , *SUPERMASSIVE black holes , *STAR maps (Astronomy) , *LONG-Term Evolution (Telecommunications) , *SOLAR flares - Abstract
The molecular cloud Sgr B2 is a natural Compton mirror in the Central Molecular Zone. It is believed that the observed fading of the Sgr B2 X-ray emission in continuum and the Fe Kα 6.4 keV line indicates past X-ray flare activity of the supermassive black hole Sgr A⋆. Sgr B2 was investigated by the INTEGRAL observatory in the hard X-ray in 2003–2009, showing clear decay of its hard X-ray emission. In this work, we present a long-term time evolution of the Sgr B2 hard X-ray continuum after 2009, associated with the hard X-ray source IGR J17475−2822 as observed by INTEGRAL. The 30–80 keV sky maps, obtained in 2009–2019, demonstrate a significant excess spatially consistent with IGR J17475−2822. The observed 2003–2019 light curve of IGR J17475−2822 is characterized by a linear decrease by a factor of ∼2 until 2011, after which it reaches a constant level of ∼1 mCrab. The source spectrum above 17 keV is consistent with a power-law model with Γ = 1.4 and a high-energy cut-off at ∼43 keV. The Sgr B2 residual emission after ∼2011 shows a good correspondence with models of X-ray emission due to the irradiation of the molecular gas by hard X-rays and low-energy cosmic ray ions. We discuss the possible origin of the residual Sgr B2 emission after 2011 within these models, including theoretically predicted multiply scattered emission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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