XMM-Newton and Suzaku X-ray Shadowing Measurements of the Solar Wind Charge Exchange, Local Bubble, and Galactic Halo Emission
David B. Henley, Robin L. Shelton (University of Georgia)

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray shadowing data from XMM-Newton and Suzaku to separate and compare foreground and halo emissions, highlighting the impact of model assumptions and abundances on measurements of the local and Galactic halo X-ray components.
Contribution
It provides a uniform analysis of shadowing observations, evaluates different foreground models, and assesses the effects of assumptions on halo property measurements.
Findings
Anders & Grevesse abundances may overestimate foreground brightness.
Single ionization temperature assumptions can lead to unreliable SWCX results.
Foreground brightness and halo temperature estimates are sensitive to model choices.
Abstract
We present results from a sample of XMM-Newton and Suzaku observations of interstellar clouds that cast shadows in the soft X-ray background (SXRB) - the first uniform analysis of such a sample from these missions. By fitting to the on- and off-shadow spectra, we separated the foreground and Galactic halo components of the SXRB. We tested different foreground models - two solar wind charge exchange (SWCX) models and a Local Bubble (LB) model. We also examined different abundance tables. We found that Anders & Grevesse (1989) abundances, commonly used in previous SXRB studies, may result in overestimated foreground brightnesses and halo temperatures. We also found that assuming a single solar wind ionization temperature for a SWCX model can lead to unreliable results. We compared our measurements of the foreground emission with predictions of the SWCX emission from a smooth solar wind,…
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