Search Publications
Detection of the neutral iron line from the supernova remnant W 49 B with Suzaku
Katsuda, Satoru; Nobukawa, Masayoshi; Nobukawa, Kumiko K. +2 more
Recent studies of supernova remnants (SNRs) have revealed that some SNRs exhibit a neutral iron line emission at 6.4 keV. This line has been proposed to originate from the interaction of high-energy particles formed in the SNR shell with the surrounding cold matter. We searched for the neutral iron line emission in the SNR W 49 B. Significant dete…
Multi-epoch X-ray spectral analysis of Centaurus A: Revealing new constraints on iron emission line origins
Tanimoto, Atsushi; Bamba, Aya; Hagino, Kouichi +3 more
We conduct X-ray reverberation mapping and spectral analysis of the radio galaxy Centaurus A to uncover its central structure. We compare the light curve of the hard X-ray continuum from Swift Burst Alert Telescope observations with that of the Fe K
Suzaku observation of an iron K-shell line in the spiral galaxy NGC 6946
Yamauchi, Shigeo; Inaba, Azusa; Anraku, Yumiko
An emission line at ~6.7 keV is attributable to an He-like iron K-shell transition, which indicates existence of a thin thermal plasma with a temperature of several keV. Using Suzaku archival data, we searched for the iron K-line from the spiral galaxy NGC 6946, and found it at 6.68 ± 0.07 keV at the 3.1σ level in the central $r\le {2.^{\prime }5}…
Plasma diagnostics of supernova remnant 3C 400.2 by Suzaku observations
Nobukawa, Masayoshi; Uchiyama, Hideki; Nobukawa, Kumiko K. +2 more
We report on the results of plasma diagnostics of the supernova remnant (SNR) 3C 400.2, which has been reported to have a recombining plasma by previous studies. For careful background estimation, we simultaneously fitted spectra extracted from the SNR and background regions and evaluated the SNR emission contaminating the background-region spectr…
Dark matter search in the Perseus cluster with simultaneous analysis of Hitomi and Suzaku data
Kitamoto, Shunji; Sawada, Makoto; Tamura, Takayuki +1 more
The reported detection of a 3.5 keV emission line in the Perseus cluster, possibly originating from dark matter decay, is still under scrutiny. Despite extensive observations, the detection has not yet been confirmed, and its origin remains a topic of active debate. Most of the previous searches relied on spectroscopy with X-ray charge-coupled dev…