Accretion of cool stellar winds on Sgr A*: another puzzle of the Galactic Centre?

J. Cuadra, S. Nayakshin, V. Springel, & T. Di Matteo

Paper: MNRAS Letters, submitted

Weblink: http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~jcuadra/Winds/

EPrint Server: astro-ph/0502044


Abstract:

Sgr A* is currently being fed by winds from a cluster of gravitationally bound young mass-loosing stars. Using observational constraints on the orbits, mass loss rates and wind velocities of these stars, we numerically model the distribution of gas in the 0.1-10'' region around Sgr A*. We find that radiative cooling of recently discovered slow winds leads to the formation of many cool filaments and blobs, and to a thin and rather light accretion disc with a scale of about an arcsecond. The disc however does not extend all the way to our inner boundary. Instead, hot X-ray emitting gas dominates the inner arcsecond. In our simulations, cool streams of gas frequently enter this region on low angular momentum orbits, and are then disrupted and heated up to the ambient hot gas temperature. The accreting gas around Sgr A* is thus two-phase, with a hot component, observable at X-ray wavelengths, and a cool component, which may be responsible for the majority of time variability of Sgr A* emission on hundred and thousand years time-scales.


Preprints available from the authors at jcuadra@ibm-2.MPA-Garching.MPG.DE , or the raw TeX (no figures) if you click here.

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