INTEGRAL detection of hard X-rays from NGC 6334: Nonthermal emission from colliding winds or an AGN?
Astron.Astrophys. 449 (2006) 917-923 We report the detection of hard X-ray emission from the field of the star-forming region NGC 6334 with the the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory INTEGRAL. The JEM-X monitor and ISGRI imager aboard INTEGRAL and Chandra ACIS imager were used to constr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Astron.Astrophys. 449 (2006) 917-923 We report the detection of hard X-ray emission from the field of the
star-forming region NGC 6334 with the the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
Laboratory INTEGRAL. The JEM-X monitor and ISGRI imager aboard INTEGRAL and
Chandra ACIS imager were used to construct 3-80 keV images and spectra of NGC
6334. The 3-10 keV and 10-35 keV images made with JEM-X show a complex
structure of extended emission from NGC 6334. The ISGRI source detected in the
energy ranges 20-40 keV and 40-80 keV coincides with the NGC 6334 ridge. The
20-60 keV flux from the source is (1.8+-0.37)*10(-11) erg cm(-2) s(-1).
Spectral analysis of the source revealed a hard power-law component with a
photon index about 1. The observed X-ray fluxes are in agreement with
extrapolations of X-ray imaging observations of NGC 6334 by Chandra ACIS and
ASCA GIS. The X-ray data are consistent with two very different physical
models. A probable scenario is emission from a heavily absorbed, compact and
hard Chandra source that is associated with the AGN candidate radio source NGC
6334B. Another possible model is the extended Chandra source of nonthermal
emission from NGC 6334 that can also account for the hard X-ray emission
observed by INTEGRAL. The origin of the emission in this scenario is due to
electron acceleration in energetic outflows from massive early type stars. The
possibility of emission from a young supernova remnant, as suggested by earlier
infrared observations of NGC 6334, is constrained by the non-detection of 44Ti
lines. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0512627 |