Number Density Distribution of Near-Infrared Sources on a Sub-Degree Scale in the Galactic Center: Comparison with the Fe XXV Ka Line at 6.7 keV
Kazuki Yasui, Shogo Nishiyama, Tatsuhito Yoshikawa, Schun Nagatomo,, Hideki Uchiyama, Takeshi G. Tsuru, Katsuji Koyama, Motohide Tamura, Jungmi, Kwon, Koji Sugitani, Rainer Sch\"odel, and Tetsuya Nagata

TL;DR
This study compares near-infrared star density with X-ray emission in the Galactic Center, revealing that a significant portion of the diffuse X-ray emission originates from truly diffuse plasma rather than unresolved point sources.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between stellar density and X-ray line intensity, demonstrating the presence of diffuse plasma as a major component of the Galactic Center's X-ray emission.
Findings
Stellar density increases with proximity to the Galactic center but less steeply than X-ray line intensity.
The excess of X-ray emission over stellar density suggests a diffuse plasma origin.
At least twice as much X-ray emission as expected from faint point sources alone.
Abstract
The stellar distribution derived from an and -band survey of the central region of our Galaxy is compared with the Fe XXV K (6.7 keV) line intensity observed with the Suzaku satellite. The survey is for the Galactic coordinates and (equivalent to 0.8 kpc 0.3 kpc for kpc), and the number-density distribution of stars is derived using the extinction-corrected magnitude . This is deep enough to probe the old red giant population and in turn to estimate the (, ) distribution of faint X-ray point sources such as coronally active binaries and cataclysmic variables. In the Galactic plane (), increases to the Galactic center as in the range of , but…
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