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Determining The Galactic Halos Emission Measure from UV and X-ray Observations

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 Added by Shijun Lei
 Publication date 2009
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We analyze a pair of Suzaku shadowing observations in order to determine the X-ray spectrum of the Galaxys gaseous halo. We simultaneously fit the spectra with models having halo, local, and extragalactic components. The intrinsic intensities of the halo OVII triplet and OVIII Lyman alpha emission lines are 9.98^{+1.10}_{-1.99} LU (line unit; photons cm^-2 s^-1 Sr^-1) and 2.66^{+0.37}_{-0.30} LU, respectively. Meanwhile, FUSE OVI observations for the same directions and SPEAR CIV observations for a nearby direction indicate the existence of hot halo gas at temperatures of ~10^{5.0} K to ~10^{6.0} K. This collection of data implies that the hot gas in the Galactic halo is not isothermal, but its temperature spans a relatively wide range from ~10^{5.0} K to ~10^{7.0} K. We therefore construct a differential emission measure (DEM) model for the halos hot gas, consisting of two components. In each, dEM/dlog T is assumed to follow a power-law function of the temperature and the gas is assumed to be in collisional ionizational equilibrium. The low-temperature component (LTC) of the broken power-law DEM model covers the temperature range of 10^{4.80}-10^{6.02} K with a slope of 0.30 and the high-temperature component (HTC) covers the temperature range of 10^{6.02}-10^{7.02} K with a slope of -2.21. We find that a simple model in which hot gas accretes onto the Galactic halo and cools radiatively cannot explain both the observed UV and X-ray portions of our broken power-law model. It can, however, explain the intensity in the Suzaku bandpass if the mass infall rate is 1.35*10^{-3} Msun yr^-1 kpc^-2. The UV and X-ray intensities and our broken power-law model can be well explained by hot gas produced by supernova explosions or by supernova remnants supplemented by a smooth source of X-rays.



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