X-ray Constraints on the Hot Gas Content of Early-type Galaxies in Virgo
Meicun Hou, Zhiyuan Li, Christine Jones, William Forman, Yuanyuan Su

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray data to investigate the presence and origins of hot gas in early-type galaxies within Virgo, revealing a scarcity of diffuse hot gas likely due to environmental effects or galactic winds.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of hot gas in low-to-intermediate mass ETGs in Virgo, comparing cluster and field environments with stacking and morphological evidence.
Findings
Diffuse hot gas detected in 8 galaxies, with 5 showing true hot gas characteristics.
Average X-ray luminosity per stellar mass consistent with unresolved stellar populations.
No significant hot gas in field ETGs, suggesting environmental or galactic wind effects.
Abstract
We present a systematic study of the diffuse hot gas around early-type galaxies (ETGs) residing in the Virgo cluster, based on archival {\it Chandra} observations. Our representative sample consists of 79 galaxies with low-to-intermediate stellar masses (), a mass range that has not been extensively explored with X-ray observations thus far. We detect diffuse X-ray emission in only eight galaxies and find that in five cases a substantial fraction of the detected emission can be unambiguously attributed to truly diffuse hot gas, based on their spatial distribution and spectral properties. For the individually non-detected galaxies, we constrain their average X-ray emission by performing a stacking analysis, finding a specific X-ray luminosity of , which is consistent with unresolved stellar…
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