PROJECTS
Contact Information:
Prof. Massimiliano
Galeazzi
P.O. Box 248043
Coral Gables, FL 33124
Tel: (305) 284-7141
Fax: (305) 284-4222
galeazzi@physics.miami.edu
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Diffuse
X-Ray
emission from the Local galaxy (DXL)
Massimiliano Galeazzi (PI), Meng Chiao, Michael
R. Collier, Thomas Cravens, Dimitra Koutroumpa, Kip
Kuntz, Susan Lepri, Dan McCammon, F. Scott Porter, Ina
Robertson, Steve Snowden, and Youaraj Uprety
University of Miami, NASA/Goddard Space Flight
Center, University of Michigan, Johns Hopkins University,
and University
of Kansas
The first detection of extrasolar
X-rays came in 1962 with the presence of a diffuse X-ray
flux identified by a series of three papers in 1968-69.
Subsequent investigations, primarily the Wisconsin rocket
survey and the Rosat All Sky Survey (RASS) extensively
studied the nature of the diffuse emission and its
correlation with the neutral material in the Milky Way.
X-rays observed in the 1/4 keV band in the direction of
the Galactic plane must originate locally as they are
easily absorbed by the neutral material in the Galactic
disk and it is currently believed that a significant
fraction of the 1/4 keV emission originates in an
irregularly shaped cavity in the neutral hydrogen of the
Galactic disk which contains the Sun and has dubbed the
Local Hot Bubble (LHB). Despite the "local" origin of the
emission, there is still a significant uncertainty in its
nature and characteristics. The reason for this
uncertainty lies primarily in the nature of the emission,
which is weak and diffuse, and its superimposition on
emission from other sources of the Diffuse X-ray
Background (DXB). In particular, it has been
essentially impossible to isolate the LHB contribution
from the emission from Solar Wind Charge eXchange (SWCX)
recombination. SWCX emission is generated when the highly
ionized solar wind interacts with neutral or near-neutral
gas in the exo-atmosphere and in the interplanetary
medium. An electron is captured from the neutral atom (H
or He) into an outer orbital of the highly ionized species
in a quasi-resonant process and cascades to the ground
state of the ion, often emitting soft X-rays in the
process. The SWCX spectrum is therefore dominated by
characteristic line emission that is very difficult to
separate from the presumably thermal emission from the
LHB.
It is, however, possible to separate
the foreground SWCX emission from the extra-solar sources,
such as the LHB, by looking at its spatial signature. The
slowest time-varying, and thus most troublesome component
of the SWCX emission originates in the interplanetary
medium and should show a significant geometric variation
due to the focusing of interplanetary helium. Interstellar
neutrals flow through the solar system due to the motion
of the heliosphere through the local interstellar cloud.
Gravity significantly affects helium trajectories which
execute Keplarian orbits and form a "focusing cone"
downstream of the Sun centered at ~ 6◦ below
the ecliptic plane. This results in a localized downstream
enhancement of helium which has the direct effect of
increasing the SWCX X-ray emission. By scanning the sky
through the focusing cone, the spatial signature of the
SWCX can be identified, allowing:
(a) a
separation and subsequent investigation of LHB and SWCX
emission, such as the distribution of the hot plasma
within the LHB. Combining this information with the
geometry of the local cavity derived from other
wavelengths we can then derive the physical parameters of
the plasma, that is, the pressure and density. Knowing the
physical conditions of the plasma will lead to more
accurate pictures of the solar neighborhood and the
evolution of bubbles of hot gas produced by supernovae or
stellar wind when they near the end of their existence;
(b) an
estimate
of the contribution of heliospheric SWCX to the
University of Wisconsin and ROSAT all-sky maps of the
soft x-ray background, and to every current and future
investigation of extended sources.
Current and near-term satellite
missions have only a tiny fraction of the grasp of the
proposed payload and are thus not-suitable for the
proposed investigation. In addition, the X-ray
Quantum Calorimeter (XQC) sounding rocket program is
currently studying the spectral signature of the soft
x-ray background, including the SWCX and LHB contributions
with a high resolution microcalorimeter. XQC has limited
grasp and limited spatial resolution and this
investigation, by verifying our spatial models of the SWCX
emission, is a critical complement to the XQC results.
DXL is composed of two large area (500
cm2 each at 1 keV) thin window proportional
counters that were used to produce the original UW all-sky
soft X-ray maps. The large area of the proportional
counters will provide excellent counting statistics when
scanning the sky though the He focusing cone in the
limited observing time of a sounding rocket flight. For
the scan we have chosen a region sufficiently close to the
galactic plane to absorb soft X-rays produced outside the
solar system and its local environment (within ~100 pc),
therefore minimizing the intensity and structure of the
cosmic background, as indicated by the RASS. DXL was
launched from White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico
December 12, 2012 to ensure a scanning path through the He
focusing cone when the sun is close to the maximum of its
11 year cycle.
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