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We analyse the 6.4 keV iron line component produced in the Galactic Center (GC) region by cosmic rays in dense molecular clouds (MCs) and in the diffuse molecular gas. We showed that this component, in principle, can be seen in several years in the direction of the cloud Srg B2. If this emission is produced by low energy CRs which ionize the interstellar molecular gas the intensity of the line is quite small, < 1%. However, we cannot exclude that local sources of CRs or X-ray photons nearby the cloud may provide much higher intensity of the line from there. Production of the line emission from molecular clouds depends strongly on processes of CR penetration into them. We show that turbulent motions of neutral gas may generate strong magnetic fluctuations in the clouds which prevent free penetration of CRs into the clouds from outside. We provide a special analysis of the line production by high energy electrons. We concluded that these electrons hardly provide the diffuse 6.4 keV line emission from the GC because their density is depleted by ionization losses. We do not exclude that local sources of electrons may provide an excesses of the 6.4 keV line emission in some molecular clouds and even reproduce a relatively short time variations of the iron line emission. However, we doubt whether a single electron source provides the simultaneous short time variability of the iron line emission from clouds which are distant from each other on hundred pc as observed for the GC clouds. An alternative speculation is that local electron sources could also provide the necessary effect of the line variations in different clouds that are seen simultaneously by chance that seems, however, very unlikely.
An elongated X-ray source with a strong K-shell line from He-like iron (Fe XXVI) is found at (RA, Dec)_{J2000.0}=(17h44m00s.0, -29D1340.9) in the Galactic center region. The position coincides with the X-ray thread, G359.55+0.16, which is aligned wit
It has been recently proposed that the broad line region in active galactic nuclei originates from dusty clouds driven from the accretion disk by radiation pressure, at a distance from the black hole where the disk is cooler than the dust sublimation
We study a possible connection between processes of gamma-ray emission and hydrogen ionization in a few pc of central region around Sgr A*. Previous investigations showed there is a discrepancy between interpretation of gamma-ray and ionization data
We present a new directly-observable statistic which uses sky position and proper motion of stars near the Galactic center massive black hole to identify populations with high orbital eccentricities. It is most useful for stars with large orbital per
The center of our galaxy is home to a massive black hole, SgrA*, and a nuclear star cluster containing stellar populations of various ages. While the late type stars may be too old to have retained memory of their initial orbital configuration, and h