Local ISM 3D distribution and soft X-ray background: Inferences on nearby hot gas and the North Polar Spur
L. Puspitarini, R. Lallement, J.L. Vergely, S.L. Snowden

TL;DR
This study uses 3D ISM dust maps and X-ray data to analyze the distribution of hot gas and cavities in the local interstellar medium, revealing correlations with soft X-ray emission and insights into the origins of the North Polar Spur.
Contribution
It provides a novel comparison of 3D ISM dust maps with X-ray background data, modeling hot gas distribution and examining the structure of local cavities and the NPS.
Findings
Nearby cavities contribute to soft X-ray emission.
Hot gas in the Local Bubble has a pressure of about 10,000 cm^-3K.
No evidence links the NPS to nearby cavities within 200pc.
Abstract
3D maps of the ISM can be used to locate not only IS clouds, but also IS bubbles between the clouds that are blown by stellar winds and supernovae. We compare our 3D maps of the IS dust to the ROSAT diffuse X-ray background maps. In the Plane, there is a good correspondence between the locations and extents of the mapped nearby cavities and the 0.25 keV background emission distribution, showing that most of these nearby cavities contribute to this soft X-ray emission. Assuming a constant dust to gas ratio and homogeneous 1MK hot gas filling the cavities, we modeled in a simple way the 0.25 keV surface brightness along the Galactic plane as seen from the Sun, taking into account the absorption by the mapped clouds. The data-model comparison favors the existence of hot gas in the Local Bubble (LB). The average mean pressure in the local cavities is found to be on the order of about 10,000…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
