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Comment on An X-ray chimney extending hundreds of parsecs above and below the Galactic Centre (2019, Nature, 567, 34)

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 نشر من قبل Shinya Nakashima
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
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A recent article An X-ray chimney extending hundreds of parsecs above and below the Galactic Centre (2019, Nature, 567, 34) reported the detection of chimney-like X-ray-emitting features above and below the Galactic Center from XMM-Newton observations. We note here that these features were already reported by our Suzaku papers: Nakashima et al. (2013, ApJ, 773, 20, arXiv:1310.4236) for the southern feature and Nakashima et al. (2019, ApJ, in press, arXiv:1903.02571) for the northern feature. In particular, Nakashima et al. (2013) show that the ionization state of the southern feature is not in collisional ionization equilibrium and is most likely in a recombining or over-ionized state, which suggests its origin in the Galactic Center about 0.1 Myr ago.

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In response to the comment posted by Nakashima et al. (arXiv:1903.1176), regarding prior claims for the features that we referred to as the Galactic Center Chimneys (2019, Nature, 567, 347), we point out the following: 1) The Nakashima et al. 2019 paper appeared in the arXiv on March 8th (1903.02571), after our paper was in the final stage of printing (accepted on January 30th). It is however interesting to see that the morphology of the brightest portions of the two results are in broad agreement (compare their Fig. 1 to our Extended Data Figs. 1 and 2). 2) Nakashima et al. 2013 ApJ 773, 20 claim the discovery of a blob of recombining plasma ~1deg south of Sgr A*, implying peculiar abundances. Again, their image (Fig. 1) agrees with the brightest portions of our images, although it does not show any direct connection between the plasma blob and the central parsec (e.g., such as the quasi-continuous chimney that we reported), nor evidence for an outflow from the center. We apologize for overlooking an appropriate citation to this contribution by Nakashima et al. 3) We fitted the XMM-Newton and Chandra data at the same position of the claimed recombining plasma and we did not find any clear-cut evidence for the presence of either an over-ionised plasma or peculiar abundances. Future X-ray calorimetric observations will presumably clarify this disagreement. 4) The continuity of the Chimney features, their quasi-symmetrical placement relative to Sgr A*, and their relatively sharp and well-defined edges are the essential features of our data that have led us to propose that the Chimneys are a unified columnar structure that represents a channel for the outflow of energy from the central region, possibly contributing to the stocking of the relativistic particle population manifested in the Fermi Bubbles.
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