Calibration of X-ray absorption in our Galaxy
R. Willingale, R.L.C. Starling, A.P. Beardmore, N.R. Tanvir, P.T., O'Brien

TL;DR
This paper presents an empirical method using Swift XRT afterglow data to accurately estimate the total hydrogen column density in the Milky Way, improving X-ray absorption correction for extragalactic sources.
Contribution
The authors develop a new empirical model for Galactic X-ray absorption based on a large sample of GRB afterglows, enhancing previous methods especially at low Galactic latitudes.
Findings
Derived a simple function for N(H2) variation across the sky.
Showed the dust-to-hydrogen ratio correlates with CO emission.
Provided a revised Galactic absorption model for X-ray astronomy.
Abstract
Prediction of the soft X-ray absorption along lines of sight through our Galaxy is crucial for understanding the spectra of extragalactic sources, but requires a good estimate of the foreground column density of photoelectric absorbing species. Assuming uniform elemental abundances this reduces to having a good estimate of the total hydrogen column density, N(Htot)=N(HI)+2N(H2). The atomic component, N(HI), is reliably provided using the mapped 21 cm radio emission but estimating the molecular hydrogen column density, N(H2), expected for any particular direction, is difficult. The X-ray afterglows of GRBs are ideal sources to probe X-ray absorption in our Galaxy because they are extragalactic, numerous, bright, have simple spectra and occur randomly across the entire sky. We describe an empirical method, utilizing 493 afterglows detected by the Swift XRT, to determine N(Htot) through…
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