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Aya Bamba Hiroya Yamaguchi Katsuji Koyama Junko S. Hiraga Steve Holt John P. Hughes Hideaki Katagiri Jun Kataoka Satoru Katsuda Shunji Kitamoto Motohide Kokubun Hironori Matsumoto Emi Miyata Koji Mori Hiroshi Nakajima Masanobu Ozaki Rob Petre Akiko Sekiguchi Tadayuki Takahashi Takaaki Tanaka Yukikatsu Terada Hiroshi Tomida Yohko Tsuboi Masahiro Tsujimoto Hiroshi Tsunemi Yasunobu Uchiyama Masaru Ueno Shin Watanabe 《Advances in Space Research (includes Cospar's Information Bulletin, Space Research Today)》2008,41(3):411-415
SN 1006 is one of the supernova remnants (SNRs) with relatively low-temperature electrons, considering the young age of just 1000 years. We carried out SN 1006 mapping observations with the X-ray Imaging Spectrometers (XIS) and the Hard X-ray Detector (HXD) onboard Suzaku, the fifth Japanese X-ray satellite. Thanks to the excellent spectral resolution of XIS in the soft X-ray band, H-like and He-like oxygen emission lines were clearly detected, and we could make a map of the line intensity, and as well as a flux and the photon index of nonthermal component. We found that these parameters have spatial dependences from region to region in the SNR; the north region is bright in nonthermal, while dim in thermal; the east region is bright in both nonthermal and thermal; the inner region shows dim nonthermal and bright thermal emission. The photon index is the smallest in the north region. 相似文献
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Yuichiro Ezoe Kumi Ishikawa Takaya Ohashi Noriko Y. Yamasaki Kazuhisa Mitsuda Ryuichi Fujimoto Yoshizumi Miyoshi Naoki Terada Yasunobu Uchiyama Yoshifumi Futaana 《Advances in Space Research (includes Cospar's Information Bulletin, Space Research Today)》2011
Recent results of solar system planets observed with the Japanese X-ray astronomy satellite Suzaku are reviewed. Thanks to the low instrumental background and good energy resolution, X-ray CCDs onboard Suzaku are one of the best probes to study diffuse X-ray emission. An overview of the Suzaku data of Jupiter and Earth is presented, along with preliminary results of Mars. Firstly, diffuse hard X-ray emission is discovered in 1–5 keV at Jovian radiation belts. Its spectrum is represented by a power-law continuum with a photon index of ∼1.4. This emission could originate from inverse-Compton scattering of solar photons by tens MeV electrons. Secondly, variable diffuse soft X-rays are serendipitously found during observations in the directions of the north ecliptic pole and galactic ridge. Good time correlations with the solar wind and emission lines found in the X-ray spectra are firm evidences of a solar wind charge exchange emission with Earth’s exosphere. Thirdly, diffuse X-ray emission from Martian exosphere via the solar wind charge exchange is investigated for the first time at solar minimum. A stringent upper limit on the density of the Martian exosphere is placed from the Suzaku data. 相似文献
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