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The SRG/eROSITA diffuse soft X-ray background II. spectra and morphology of the eROSITA bubbles in the western Galactic hemisphere

Published 4 May 2026 in astro-ph.HE | (2605.02998v1)

Abstract: The eROSITA bubbles (eRObub) were discovered in 2020 in the first SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey, and are among the most extended structures in the X-ray sky. Using eROSITA all-sky maps and spatially resolved spectra, we aim to infer the three-dimensional structure and measure the hot gas properties of the eRObub. We fit spectra binned to a constant S/N and high-S/N spectra from custom regions to examine gas properties in more detail. We fit the morphology of eRObub with a parametrised geometrical model that describes a blast wave propagating into an idealised Galactic halo from the centre. We found the interior of the western eRObub is best characterised by two emission components with relatively uniform temperatures: a hotter component at $kT=0.60\pm0.02$ keV, and a colder one at $kT=0.21{+0.03}_{-0.01}$ keV, where the latter's emission measure is about five times higher on average. Our spectra suggest sub-solar abundances ($Z=0.2\pm0.1 Z_\odot$), consistent with expectations for the Galactic halo, while we find no conclusive evidence for $α$-element enhancement. In contrast, the North Polar Spur exhibits higher abundances ($Z>0.5 Z_\odot$), which, at face value, disfavours a common origin. We spectrally confirm an apparent cool shell at $kT\sim0.18$-$0.2$ keV surrounding the northern eRObub, assuming collisional ionisation equilibrium. We found no noticeable difference in X-ray emission in regions overlapping with the Fermi Bubbles. Our geometrical model suggests that the horizontal size of both eRObub is well-constrained (semi-minor axis $\sim 6$ kpc), but their vertical extent is uncertain, as the observed X-ray emission is almost insensitive to the existence and location of a bubble cap. Additionally, a tilt ($\sim 30{\circ}$) towards $l\sim 220{\circ}$ is needed to reproduce the projected image of the northern eRObub, whereas the southern bubble requires little tilt.

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