We present results of long NuSTAR (200 ks) and XMM-Newton (100 ks)
observations of the Arches stellar cluster, a source of bright thermal (kT~2
keV) X-rays with prominent Fe XXV K_alpha 6.7 keV line emission and a nearby
molecular cloud, characterized by an extended non-thermal hard X-ray continuum
and fluorescent Fe K_alpha 6.4 keV line of a neutral or low ionization state
material around the cluster. Our analysis demonstrates that the non-thermal
emission of the Arches cloud underwent a dramatic change, with its homogeneous
morphology, traced by fluorescent Fe K_alpha line emission, vanishing after
2012, revealing three bright clumps. The declining trend of the cloud emission,
if linearly fitted, is consistent with half-life decay time of ~8 years. Such
strong variations have been observed in several other molecular clouds in the
Galactic Centre, including the giant molecular cloud Sgr B2, and point toward a
similar propagation of illuminating fronts, presumably induced by the past
flaring activity of Sgr A*.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables, submitted to MNRAS; comments welcom