Hot X-ray coronae around massive spiral galaxies: a unique probe of structure formation models
Akos Bogdan, William R. Forman, Mark Vogelsberger, Herve Bourdin,, Debora Sijacki, Pasquale Mazzotta, Ralph P. Kraft, Christine Jones, Marat, Gilfanov, Eugene Churazov, Laurence P. David

TL;DR
This study detects and analyzes hot X-ray coronae around two massive spiral galaxies, providing observational constraints that favor certain structure formation models and highlighting the need for improved feedback mechanisms in simulations.
Contribution
First detection of hot X-ray coronae beyond optical disks in two massive spirals, offering new data to test and refine galaxy formation models.
Findings
Hot gas detected to ~60 kpc with temperature ~0.6 keV.
Observed gas properties favor the Arepo simulation code.
Baryon fractions are below cosmic values, indicating missing baryons.
Abstract
Luminous X-ray gas coronae in the dark matter halos of massive spiral galaxies are a fundamental prediction of structure formation models, yet only a few such coronae have been detected so far. In this paper, we study the hot X-ray coronae beyond the optical disks of two normal massive spirals, NGC1961 and NGC6753. Based on XMM-Newton X-ray observations, hot gaseous emission is detected to ~60 kpc - well beyond their optical radii. The hot gas has a best-fit temperature of kT~0.6 keV and an abundance of ~0.1 Solar, and exhibits a fairly uniform distribution, suggesting that the quasi-static gas resides in hydrostatic equilibrium in the potential well of the galaxies. The bolometric luminosity of the gas in the (0.05-0.15)r_200 region (r_200 is the virial radius) is ~6e40 erg/s for both galaxies. The baryon mass fractions of NGC1961 and NGC6753 are f_b~0.1, which fall short of the cosmic…
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