Abstract

We present XMM-Newton observations around the sight line of Mrk 421. The emission spectrum of the Milky Way (MW) circumgalactic medium (CGM) shows that a two-phase model is a better fit to the data compared to a single-phase model; in addition to the warm-hot virial phase at log (T/K) = 6.30 ± 0.02, a hot super-virial phase at log (T/K) = is required. Furthermore, we present observations of five fields within 5 degrees of the primary field. Their spectra also require a two-phase model at warm-hot and hot temperatures. The hot phase, which was first discovered in Das et al. in 2019, appears to be widespread. By chemical tagging, we show that the emission from the supevirial phase comes from the L-shell transitions of Fe xviii–Fe xxii, and that the range of temperatures probed in emission is distinct from that in absorption. We detect scatter in temperature and emission measure in both the phases, and deduce that there is small-scale density inhomogeneity in the MW CGM. The emitting gas likely has higher density, possibly from regions close to the disk of the MW, while the absorption in the virial phase may arise from low-density gas extended out to the virial radius of the MW. The presence of the super-virial phase far from the regions around the Galactic center implicates physical processes unrelated to the activity at the Galactic center. Hot outflows resulting from star formation activity throughout the Galactic disk are likely to be responsible for producing this phase.

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