The SRG/eROSITA diffuse soft X-ray background. I. The local hot bubble in the western Galactic hemisphere
Michael C. H. Yeung, Gabriele Ponti, Michael J. Freyberg, Konrad, Dennerl, Teng Liu, Nicola Locatelli, Martin G. F. Mayer, Jeremy S. Sanders,, Manami Sasaki, Andy Strong, Yi Zhang, Xueying Zheng, Efrain Gatuzz

TL;DR
This study uses eROSITA X-ray data to analyze the local hot bubble's temperature, emission measure, and structure in the western Galactic hemisphere, revealing a north-south temperature dichotomy and dust cavity networks.
Contribution
First detailed spectral and spatial analysis of the local hot bubble using eROSITA data, including a 3D model and insights into its thermal pressure and structure.
Findings
North-south temperature dichotomy at high latitudes
Identification of dust cavities filled with hot plasma
LHB thermal pressure lower than typical supernova remnants
Abstract
The SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Surveys (eRASSs) combine the advantages of complete sky coverage and the energy resolution provided by the charge couple device and offer the most holistic and detailed view of the diffuse soft X-ray background (SXRB) to date. The first eRASS (eRASS1) was completed at solar minimum, when solar wind charge exchange emission was minimal, providing the clearest view of the SXRB. We aim to extract spatial and spectral information from each constituent of the SXRB in the western Galactic hemisphere, focusing on the local hot bubble (LHB). We extracted and analysed eRASS1 spectra from almost all directions in the western Galactic hemisphere by dividing the sky into equal signal-to-noise bins. We fitted all bins with fixed spectral templates of known background constituents. We find the temperature of the LHB exhibits a north-south dichotomy at high latitudes…
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