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Galactic wind in the bulge of the Andromeda galaxy

Galactic wind in the bulge of the Andromeda galaxy. Ákos Bogdán Marat Gilfanov. 23 February 2009. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies. AGNs X-ray binaries Faint compact sources Hot ionized gas Cosmic X-ray Background. Ákos Bogdán. Kunming 2009. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies.

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Galactic wind in the bulge of the Andromeda galaxy

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  1. Galactic wind in the bulge of the Andromeda galaxy Ákos Bogdán Marat Gilfanov 23 February 2009

  2. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies • AGNs • X-ray binaries • Faint compact sources • Hot ionized gas • Cosmic X-ray Background Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  3. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies X-ray binaries • Accreting black holes and neutron stars • Luminosity: 1035-1039 erg/s • Resolved at thedistance of M31 Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  4. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies Faint compact sources • Cataclysmic variables • Active binaries • Luminosity: • 1027-1034 erg/s • ~ to stellar mass • Galactic ridge X-ray emission Gilfanov 2004 Revnivtsev et al. 2006 Sazonov et al. 2006 Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  5. Origin of X-ray emission from galaxies Hot ionized gas • Sub-keV temperature • NGC 1316: • Elliptical galaxy • Mass of ISM: 109 M⊙ • M32: • Dwarf galaxy • X-ray light ~ K-band light • No gas detected Revnivtsev et al. 2007 Kim & Fabbiano 2003 Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  6. M31 • 780 kpc • Spiral galaxy • i=77° Ákos Bogdán

  7. X-ray data • Chandra • ~240 ks exposure time • 0.5” (1.9 pc) angular resolution • XMM-Newton • ~640 ks exposure time • Larger effective area • Better coverage of M31 Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  8. Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  9. Unresolved X-ray emission Distribution along the major axis I. 0.5 – 2 keV Chandra –XMM-Newton –3.6 micron Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  10. Unresolved X-ray emission Distribution along the major axis II. 2 – 7 keV Chandra center –Chandra south –3.6 micron Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  11. Unresolved X-ray emission Distribution along the minor axis 0.5 – 1.2 keV Chandra –XMM-Newton –Spitzer Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  12. Unresolved X-ray emission Shadows of spiral arms • i=77° • Western side is closer to us Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  13. Unresolved X-ray emission Spectral regions Central region Outer bulge region Disk region M32 Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  14. Unresolved X-ray emission Spectral analysis • Above 1.2 keV • Good agreement • Can be fitted by powerlaw • Below 1.2 keV • Soft excess component • Varying strength • Complex spectrum Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  15. Unresolved X-ray emission X-ray emitting components from M31 • Broad band component • Large number of faint compact X-ray sources • Agreement between X-ray and NIR profiles • LX/LK ratios are consistent with Milky Way and M32 • Normalized spectra are consistent with each other • Soft emission in the central regions • Concentrated towards the center • Hot ionized gas • ~2.5 kpc vertical extent • Emission from star forming regions Ákos Bogdán Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  16. Hot ISM Hot gas distribution • DSS optical image • Spitzer image • Chandra data Ákos Bogdán

  17. Hot ISM Why is it gas? • Does not follow near-infrared stellar light • No significant color gradients in M31 bulge • No significant young star population Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  18. Hot ISM Physical properties of the gas • kT ~ 0.3 keV • LX ~ 2 ∙ 1038 erg/s • Lbol ~ 4 ∙ 1038 erg/s • Mass ~ 2 ∙ 106 Msun • Cooling time: ~ 250 million years Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  19. Hot ISM Mass budget of the outflow • Stellar winds from evolved stars: ~0.0021 LK/LK,sun Msun Gyr-1 • LK ≈ 2.8 ∙ 1010 LK,sun • Mass loss rate ≈ 0.06 Msun/yr • Mass of the gas: ~ 2 ∙ 106 Msun • Replenished in ~ 35 million years < cooling time Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  20. Hot ISM Energy budget of the outflow • Type Ia supernova explosions:~0.035 SN/1010LK,sun/100yr • ESNIa = 1051 erg • Energy from SN Ia: ~3 ∙ 1040 erg/s • Lift and heat the gas: ~8 ∙ 1039 erg/s • Type Ia SN are able drive a galactic wind Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  21. Hot ISM Chemichal abundances • SN Ia add iron-peak elements (Fe, Ni) • High expected abundance • High resolution spectra are needed Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  22. Hot ISM Current work • XMM-Newton RGS • Detailed study of abundances O VIII Fe XVII N VII O VII Spectral intensity Wavelength (Å) Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  23. Conclusion • Bulk of unresolved emission originates from faint stellar type X-ray sources • Hot gas with 0.3 keV temperature • Asymmetric distribution • SN Ia driven outflow • High resolution spectra Further information: Bogdán & Gilfanov 2008, MNRAS Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  24. The End

  25. Distribution along the minor axis II. 0.5 – 1.2 keV Chandra –XMM-Newton –K-band –Spitzer Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

  26. Other properties of the outflow Speed of the outflow vwind~ 60 km/s vsound ~ 200 km/s Sub-sonic speed Rotation? Magnetic field? Abundances SN Ia add iron-peak elements (Fe, Ni) High expected abundance Ákos Bogdán Kunming 2009

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