Diffuse X-Ray Emission from the Quiescent Superbubble M17, the Omega Nebula
Abstract
The emission nebula M17 contains a young ~1 Myr-old open cluster; the winds from the OB stars of this cluster have blown a superbubble around the cluster. ROSAT observations of M17 detected diffuse X-ray emission peaking at the cluster and filling the superbubble interior. The young age of the cluster suggests that no supernovae have yet occurred in M17; therefore, it provides a rare opportunity to study hot gas energized solely by shocked stellar winds in a quiescent superbubble. We have analyzed the diffuse X-ray emission from M17, and compared the observed X-ray luminosity of ~2.5*1033 ergs/s and the hot gas temperature of ~8.5*106 K and mass of ~1 MSun to model predictions. We find that bubble models with heat conduction overpredict the X-ray luminosity by two orders of magnitude; the strong magnetic fields in M17, as measured from HI Zeeman observations, have most likely inhibited heat conduction and associated mass evaporation. Bubble models without heat conduction can explain the X-ray properties of M17, but only if cold nebular gas can be dynamically mixed into the hot bubble interior and the stellar winds are clumpy with mass-loss rates reduced by a factor of >=3. Future models of the M17 superbubble must take into account the large-scale density gradient, small-scale clumpiness, and strong magnetic field in the ambient interstellar medium.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.