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The possible impact Sgr A East is having on the Galactic center has fueled speculation concerning its age and the energetics of the supernova explosion that produced it. We have carried out the first in-depth analysis of the remnants evolution and its various interactions: with the stellar winds flowing out from the inner ~2 pc, with the supermassive black hole, Sgr A*, and with the 50 km/s molecular cloud behind and to the East of the nucleus. We have found that a rather standard supernova explosion with energy ~1.5e51 ergs is sufficient to create the remnant we see today, and that the latter is probably only ~1,700 years old. The X-ray Ridge between ~9 and 15 to the NE of Sgr A* appears to be the product of the current interaction between the remaining supernova ejecta and the outflowing winds. Perhaps surprisingly, we have also found that the passage of the remnant across the black hole would have enhanced the accretion rate onto the central object by less than a factor 2. Such a small increase cannot explain the current Fe fluorescence observed from the molecular cloud Sgr B2; this fluorescence would have required an increase in Sgr A*s luminosity by 6 orders of magnitude several hundred years ago. Instead, we have uncovered what appears to be a more plausible scenario for this transient irradiation--the interaction between the expanding remnant and the 50 km/s molecular cloud. The first impact would have occurred about 1,200 years after the explosion, producing a 2-200 keV luminosity of ~1e39 ergs/s. During the intervening 300-400 years, the dissipation of kinetic energy subsided considerably, leading to the much lower luminosity (~1e36 ergs/s at 2-10 keV) we see today.
This paper reports the analysis procedure and results of simultaneous spectral fits of the Suzaku archive data for Sagittarius (Sgr) A East and the nearby Galactic center X-ray emission (GCXE). The results are that the mixed-morphology supernova remn
We report ALMA observations with resolution $approx0.5$ at 3 mm of the extended Sgr B2 cloud in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). We detect 271 compact sources, most of which are smaller than 5000 AU. By ruling out alternative possibilities, we concl
The centre of our Galaxy harbours a 4 million solar mass black hole that is unusually quiet: its present X-ray luminosity is more than 10 orders of magnitude less than its Eddington luminosity. The observation of iron fluorescence and hard X-ray emis
We report on multi-frequency, wideband radio observations of the Galactic Center magnetar (SGR 1745$-$2900) with the Green Bank Telescope for $sim$100 days immediately following its initial X-ray outburst in April 2013. We made multiple simultaneous
Over the last decade, X-ray observations of Sgr A* have revealed a black hole in a deep sleep, punctuated roughly once per day by brief flares. The extreme X-ray faintness of this supermassive black hole has been a long-standing puzzle in black hole