Hot Diffuse Emission in the Nuclear Starburst Region of NGC 2903
Mihoko Yukita, Douglas A. Swartz, Allyn F. Tennant, Roberto Soria,, Jimmy A. Irwin

TL;DR
This study uses deep Chandra X-ray observations to analyze the diffuse hot gas and point sources in NGC 2903's nuclear starburst region, revealing outflows, gas morphology, and the absence of an active nucleus.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of the hot gas components, their origins, and the potential outflow in NGC 2903, highlighting the impact of starburst activity on the galaxy's environment.
Findings
Detection of soft diffuse X-ray emission extending 5 kpc from the nucleus.
Identification of a hard X-ray component associated with supernova-driven winds.
Upper limit on nuclear point source luminosity indicates no active galactic nucleus.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a deep Chandra observation of the late-type barred spiral galaxy NGC 2903. The Chandra data reveal soft (kT_e ~ 0.2-0.5keV) diffuse emission in the nuclear starburst region and extending ~5kpc to the north and west of the nucleus. Much of this soft hot gas is likely to be from local active star-forming regions; however, besides the nuclear region, the morphology of hot gas does not strongly correlate with sites of active star formation. The central ~650 pc radius starburst zone exhibits much higher surface brightness diffuse emission than the surrounding regions and a harder spectral component in addition to its soft component. We interpret the hard component as being of thermal origin with kT_e~3.6keV and to be directly associated with a wind fluid produced by supernovae and massive star winds. The inferred terminal velocity for this hard component, ~1100 km/s,…
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