1112.0530 (Q. Daniel Wang)
Q. Daniel Wang
Galactic X-ray emission is a manifestation of various high-energy phenomena
and processes. The brightest X-ray sources are typically accretion-powered
objects: active galactic nuclei and low- or high-mass X-ray binaries. Such
objects with X-ray luminosities of > 10^{37} ergs/s can now be detected
individually in nearby galaxies. The contributions from fainter discrete
sources (including cataclysmic variables, active binaries, young stellar
objects, and supernova remnants) are well correlated with the star formation
rate or stellar mass of galaxies. The study of discrete X-ray sources is
essential to our understanding of stellar evolution, dynamics, and end-products
as well as accretion physics. With the subtraction of the discrete source
contributions, one can further map out truly diffuse X-ray emission, which can
be used to trace the feedback from active galactic nuclei, as well as from
stars, both young and old, in the form of stellar winds and supernovae. The
X-ray emission efficiency, however, is only about 1% of the energy input rate
of the stellar feedback alone. The bulk of the feedback energy is most likely
gone with outflows into large-scale galactic halos. Much is yet to be
investigated to comprehend the role of such outflows in regulating the
ecosystem, hence the evolution of galaxies. Even the mechanism of the diffuse
X-ray emission remains quite uncertain. A substantial fraction of the emission
cannot arise directly from optically-thin thermal plasma, as commonly assumed,
and most likely originates in its charge exchange with neutral gas. These
uncertainties underscore our poor understanding of the feedback and its
interplay with the galaxy evolution.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.0530
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