A Deep XMM-Newton Study of the Hot Gaseous Halo Around NGC 1961
Michael E. Anderson, Eugene Churazov, Joel N. Bregman

TL;DR
This study uses XMM-Newton data to analyze the hot gaseous halo of NGC 1961, revealing its extent, temperature, metallicity, and mass, and comparing it to halos around elliptical galaxies to understand galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First detailed spatial and spectral analysis of NGC 1961's hot halo, providing new measurements of its properties and insights into galaxy halo formation and accretion processes.
Findings
Hot halo detected up to 80 kpc
Temperature decreases with radius, similar to elliptical galaxies
Hot halo mass comparable to stellar mass, with ~30% baryon fraction
Abstract
We examine 11 XMM-Newton observations of the giant spiral galaxy NGC 1961, allowing us to study the hot gaseous halo of a spiral galaxy in unprecedented detail. We perform a spatial and a spectral analysis; with the former, the hot halo is detected to at least 80 kpc and with the latter its properties can be measured in detail up to 42 kpc. We find evidence for a negative gradient in the temperature profile as is common for elliptical galaxies. We measure a rough metallicity profile, which is consistent with being flat at . Converting to this metallicity, the deprojected density profile is consistent with previous parametric fits, with no evidence for a break within 42 kpc (0.1R). Extrapolating to the virial radius, we infer a hot halo mass comparable to the stellar mass of the galaxy, and a baryon fraction from the stars and hot gas of around…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
