Detection of a luminous hot X-ray corona around the massive spiral galaxy NGC266
Akos Bogdan, William R. Forman, Ralph P. Kraft, Christine Jones

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of a luminous hot X-ray corona around the massive spiral galaxy NGC266, providing observational evidence supporting galaxy formation models predicting such features.
Contribution
First detailed observational evidence of a luminous hot X-ray corona around a massive spiral galaxy, aligning with theoretical predictions.
Findings
Diffuse X-ray emission extends to ~70 kpc
Most emission is at energies <1.2 keV indicating hot gas
X-ray properties are similar to other known spiral coronae
Abstract
The presence of luminous hot X-ray coronae in the dark matter halos of massive spiral galaxies is a basic prediction of galaxy formation models. However, observational evidence for such coronae is very scarce, with the first few examples having only been detected recently. In this paper, we study the large-scale diffuse X-ray emission associated with the massive spiral galaxy NGC266. Using ROSAT and Chandra X-ray observations we argue that the diffuse emission extends to at least ~70 kpc, whereas the bulk of the stellar light is confined to within ~25 kpc. Based on X-ray hardness ratios, we find that most of the diffuse emission is released at energies <1.2 keV, which indicates that this emission originates from hot X-ray gas. Adopting a realistic gas temperature and metallicity, we derive that in the (0.05-0.15)r_200 region (where r_200 is the virial radius) the bolometric X-ray…
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