Ambiguities in fits to the complex x-ray spectra of starburst galaxies

Mar, 2000
6 pages
Published in:
  • Astrophys.J. 538 (2000) 555
e-Print:

Citations per year

2001200620112016202001234
Abstract: (arXiv)
Spectral fits to X-ray data from both NGC 253 and M 82 provide ambiguous results. The so-called ``best fit'' results depend on the instrument with which the data were obtained and obviously on the choice of spectral model composition. We show that different spectral models can be fit equally well to BeppoSAX data of both galaxies. Metallicities are unreliable in general, with a strong dependence on the choice of model. Preference to one particular spectral model can only be given by combining spectroscopic and imaging X-ray data from all available satellites (ROSAT, ASCA, and BeppoSAX). Based on spectra of NGC 253, we demonstrate that a model consisting of two or more thermal plasma components plus a hard power law continuum and Fe K alpha line emission can explain all observations. These model components represent the integral spectrum of thermal gas and compact sources in starburst galaxies that are most likely supernova remnants and X-ray binaries. The same model can fit the X-ray data of M 82, but there the evidence, from ROSAT imaging, of the existence of compact sources which might represent high-mass X-ray binaries is weaker. This implies that its hard X-ray emission, which is extended in ROSAT images, might - if truly diffuse - be dominated by a very hot (several keV energy) thermal gas component.