4.6 Article

A viscous heating mechanism for the hot plasma in the Galactic center region

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 452, Issue 1, Pages 15-U20

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054356

Keywords

galaxy : center; X-rays : ISM; ISM : clouds; ISM : magnetic fields; plasmas; ISM : kinematics and dynamics

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In addition to lines originating in a soft phase at similar to 0.8 keV and to cold molecular clouds, the X-ray spectra from the Galactic center region also exhibit properties similar to those of a diffuse, thin, very hot plasma at 8 keV on a scale of hundreds of parsecs. This phase is surprising for more than one reason. First, such a hot plasma should not be bound to the Galactic plane and the power needed to sustain the escaping matter would be higher then any known source. Second, there is no known mechanism able to heat the plasma to more than a few keV. Recently we have suggested that, hydrogen having escaped, the hot plasma could be a helium plasma, heavy enough to be gravitationally confined. In this case, the required power is much more reasonable. We present here a possible heating mechanism which taps the gravitational energy of the molecular clouds. We note that the 8 keV plasma is highly viscous and we show how viscous friction of molecular clouds flowing within the hot phase can dissipate energy in the gas and heat it. We detail the MHD wake of a spherical cloud by considering the different MHD waves the cloud can excite. We find that most of the energy is dissipated by the damping of Alfvenic perturbations in two possible manners, namely by non-linear effects and by a large scale curvature of the field lines. We find that the total dissipation rate depends on the field strength. For fields B less than or similar to 200 mu G both mechanisms produce power comparable to or higher than the radiative losses; for strong fields B greater than or similar to 1 mG, only the curvature damping can balance the X-ray emission and requires a radius of curvature R-c less than or similar to 100 pc; whereas for intermediate fields, the total dissipation is more than one order of magnitude smaller, requiring a higher accretion rate. We note that the plasma parameters may be optimal to make the dissipation most effcient, suggesting a self-regulation mechanism. The loss of kinetic and gravitational energy also causes accretion of the clouds and may have significant action on the gas dynamics in this region between the large scale, bar dominated flow and the central accretion to the massive black hole.

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