Evidence for intermediate polars as the origin of the Galactic Center hard X-ray emission
Charles J. Hailey, Kaya Mori, Kerstin Perez, Alicia M. Canipe, Jaesub, Hong, John A. Tomsick, Steven E. Boggs, Finn E. Christensen, William W., Craig, Francesca Fornasini, Jonathan E. Grindlay, Fiona A. Harrison, Melania, Nynka, Farid Rahoui, Daniel Stern, Shuo Zhang

TL;DR
This study suggests that intermediate polars are the primary source of the unresolved hard X-ray emission in the Galactic Center, with their white dwarf masses aligning with the typical CV population, challenging previous lower-mass estimates.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that broad-band NuSTAR observations indicate higher white dwarf masses in IPs and supports their role as the main contributors to the Galactic Center's hard X-ray emission, contrasting earlier narrow-band findings.
Findings
Inner 10 pc emission can be explained by IPs with ~0.9 M_sun
Narrow energy band fitting led to underestimated WD masses
A significant fraction of point sources are likely IPs
Abstract
Recently, unresolved hard (20-40 keV) X-ray emission has been discovered within the central 10 pc of the Galaxy, possibly indicating a large population of intermediate polars (IPs). Chandra and XMM-Newton measurements in the surrounding ~50 pc imply a much lighter population of IPs with . Here we use broad-band NuSTAR observations of two IPs: TV Columbae, which has a fairly typical but widely varying reported mass of , and IGR J17303-0601, with a heavy reported mass of . We investigate how varying spectral models and observed energy ranges influence estimated white dwarf mass. Observations of the inner 10 pc can be accounted for by IPs with , consistent with that of the CV population in general, and the X-ray observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
