Abstract
Abstract Our study focuses on characterizing the highly ionized gas within the Milky Way’s (MW) Circumgalactic Medium (CGM) that gives rise to ionic transitions in the X-ray band 2 - 25 Å. Utilizing stacked Chandra/ACIS-S MEG and LETG spectra toward QSO sightlines, we employ the self-consistent hybrid ionization code PHASE to model our data. The stacked spectra are optimally described by three distinct gas phase components: a warm (log (T/K) ∼ 5.5), warm-hot (log (T/K) ∼6), and hot (log (T/K) ∼ 7.5) components. These findings confirm the presence of the hot component in the MW’s CGM indicating its coexistence with a warm and a warm-hot gas phases. We find this hot component to be homogeneous in temperature but inhomogeneous in column density. The gas in the hot component requires over-abundances relative to solar to be consistent with the Dispersion Measure (DM) from the Galactic halo reported in the literature. For the hot phase we estimated a DM = $55.1^{+29.9}_{-23.7}$ pc cm−3. We conclude that this phase is either enriched in Oxygen, Silicon, and Sulfur, or has metallicity over 6 times solar value, or a combination of both. We do not detect Fe L-shell absorption lines, implying O/Fe ≥ 4. The non-solar abundance ratios found in the super-virial gas component in the Galactic halo suggest that this phase arises from Galactic feedback.
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