A Search for Diffuse X-ray Emission from GeV Detected Galactic Globular Clusters
P. Eger, W. Domainko

TL;DR
This study searches for diffuse X-ray emission in several globular clusters to compare with Terzan 5, finding no significant emission and constraining models of non-thermal radiation processes in these clusters.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic X-ray search for diffuse emission in multiple GCs and tests models explaining high-energy signals in Terzan 5.
Findings
No significant diffuse X-ray emission detected in the studied GCs.
Upper limits challenge certain non-thermal emission models.
Some scenarios remain plausible for specific clusters like NGC 6139.
Abstract
Recently, diffuse and extended sources in TeV gamma-rays as well as in X-rays have been detected in the direction of the Galactic globular cluster (GC) Terzan 5. Remarkably, this is among the brightest GCs detected in the GeV regime. The nature of both the TeV and the diffuse X-ray signal from Terzan 5 is not settled yet. These emissions most likely indicate the presence of several non-thermal radiation processes in addition to these giving rise to the GeV signal. The aim of this work is to search for diffuse X-ray emission from the GeV detected GCs M 62, NGC 6388, NGC 6541, M 28, M 80 and NGC 6139 to compare the obtained results with the signal detected from Terzan 5. This study will help to determine whether Terzan 5 stands out amongst other GC or whether a whole population of globular clusters feature similar properties. None of the six GCs show significant diffuse X-ray emission…
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