ASCA Observation of an "X-ray Shadow" in the Galactic Plane

Abstract

The diffuse X-ray background (DXB) emission near the Galactic plane (l,b 25.6,0.78) has been observed with ASCA. The observed region is toward a Galactic molecular cloud which was recently reported to cast a deep X-ray shadow in the 0.5 - 2.0 keV band DXB. The selection of this particular region is intended to provide a constraint on the spatial distribution of the DXB emission along the line of sight: i.e., the molecular cloud is optically thick at <2 keV and so the bulk of the observed soft X-rays must originate in the foreground of the cloud, which is at 3 kpc from the Sun. In the 0.8 - 9.0 keV band, the observed spectrum is primarily from multiple components of thermal plasmas. We here report a detection of soft X-ray (0.5 - 2 keV) emission from an 107 K thermal plasma. Comparisons with the ROSAT data suggest that this soft X-ray emission is absorbed by NH = 1 - 3 × 1021 cm-2, which implies a path-length through the soft X-ray emitting regions of 1 kpc from the Sun.

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