An unresolved X-ray glow (at energies above a few kiloelectronvolts) was discovered about 25 years ago and found to be coincident with the Galactic diskthe Galactic ridge X-ray emission. This emission has a spectrum characteristic of a 10 8 K optically thin thermal plasma, with a prominent iron emission line at 6.7 keV. The gravitational well of the Galactic disk, however, is far too shallow to confine such a hot interstellar medium; instead, it would flow away at a velocity of a few thousand kilometres per second, exceeding the speed of sound in the gas. To replenish the energy losses requires a source of 10 43 erg s -1, exceeding by orders of magnitude all plausible energy sources in the Milky Way. An alternative is that the hot plasma is bound to a multitude of faint sources, which is supported by the recently observed similarities in the X-ray and near-infrared surface brightness distributions (the latter traces the Galactic stellar distribution). Here we report that at energies of 6-7 keV, more than 80 per cent of the seemingly diffuse X-ray emission is resolved into discrete sources, probably accreting white dwarfs and coronally active stars. © 2009 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
CITATION STYLE
Revnivtsev, M., Sazonov, S., Churazov, E., Forman, W., Vikhlinin, A., & Sunyaev, R. (2009). Discrete sources as the origin of the Galactic X-ray ridge emission. Nature, 458(7242), 1142–1144. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature07946
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