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The excess of γ-ray emission in the energy range 3 – 7 MeV discovered by COMPTEL in the direction of the Orion complex may imply that there is a powerful source of low energy cosmic rays in the local galactic medium. Several interpretations of the excess have been suggested. One of them assumes that the emission is identified with nuclear de-excitation lines of excited 16O and 14C. To provide the...
The current status of observations of energetic particles in the “local bubble” is reviewed. This includes primarily “direct” measurements of cosmic rays made in the Solar System, but also the “remote sensing” made possible by observing cosmic ray produced γ-rays in the nearby interstellar clouds. Since the energetic events responsible for the formation of our local bubble may also have produced copious...
Diffuse excess 1/4 keV soft X-ray emission was found to be positionally correlated with the column density distribution of the high velocity cloud (HVC) complex C (Kerp et al. 1996). Here we point out that the detected diffuse X-ray emission is indeed associated with the HVC phenomenon. For this purpose we study the 1/4 keV radiation transfer as well as the HI column density distribution of HVCs and...
We have analyzed the ROSAT PSPC all-sky survey maps of the soft X-ray background (SXRB) in the 3/4 keV band. One approach was to study the large-scale distribution of the X-ray emission with a multipole analysis. Here a significant dipole toward the galactic center region was found. This is interpreted in terms of variation of distant X-ray emission, e.g. galactic halo. Also a smallscale structure...
The soft X-ray background (SXRB, 0.1 — 2.0 keV) is generally believed to be comprised of a local component, the Local (Hot) Bubble (LHB), which is only marginally absorbed, and of distant emission (galactic halo, extragalactic background). It is vital to know the foreground emission (spectrum, intensity) if one wants to disentangle and determine the 3-dimensional structure of the X-ray emitting regions...
The Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik (MPE) in Garching, Germany, uses its large X-ray beam line facility PANTER for testing X-ray astronomical instrumentation. A number of telescopes, gratings, filters, and detectors, e.g. for astronomical satellite missions like Exosat, ROSAT, Chandra (LETG), BeppoSAX, SOHO (CDS), XMM-Newton, ABRIXAS, Swift (XRT), have been successfully calibrated...
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