High-Resolution X-Ray Observations of M82
Why is it important?
Star formation consumes interstellar gas and heats the local material as
massive stars produce strong high-velocity winds and explode as supernovae.
In the central parts of starburst galaxies the star formation is so intense
that a supernova occurs every few years, producing a massive bubble of
hot (10 million K) gas which eventually escapes from the galaxy completely
as a "superwind." The observational study of the evolution of the hot gas
in starburst events is still in the early stages, with few high-fidelity
X-ray images or spectra available.
What did we do?
We analyzed the 34 ksec ROSAT
HRI observation of M82 and determined that the X-ray emission along the
minor axis is consistent with the outflow of gas in a jet that is partially
confined within 1.6 kpc of the nucleus and expands freely at larger radii;
this emission is detected to a distance of 6 kpc from the nucleus. We also
studied the variability of two X-ray sources in M82 that are candidates
for extragalactic black holes.
You can read a Mercury Magazine
article about this work.
You can read an Astronomy Magazine
article about this work.
Journal Articles
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"Two
Very Luminous Variable X-ray Sources in M82," Alfonso Collura, Fabio
Reale, Eric Schulman, and Joel N. Bregman,
Astrophysical Journal, 1994, 420, L63.
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"High
Resolution X-Ray Imaging of the Starburst Galaxy M82," Joel N. Bregman,
Eric Schulman, and Kohji Tomisaka, 1995, Astrophysical
Journal, 439, 155.