Chandra Discovery of a Tree in the X-ray Forest towards PKS 2155-304: the Local Filament?

Abstract
We present the first X-ray detection of resonant absorption from warm/hot local gas either in our Galaxy, or in the Intergalactic space surrounding our Galaxy, along the line of sight toward the blazar PKS 2155-304. The Chandra HRCS-LETG spectrum of this z=0.116 source clearly shows unresolved OVII(Ka) and NeIX(Ka) resonant absorption lines at 21.603 A and 13.448 A (i.e. cz = [-340--200] km/s in the rest frame, from the OVII line). OVIII(Ka) and OVII(Kb) from the same system are also detected at a lower significance level, while upper limits are set on OVIII(Kb), NeX(Ka) and NeIX(Kb). The FUSE spectrum of this source shows complex OVI(2s-->2p) absorption at the same redshift as the X-ray system, made by at least two components: one relatively narrow and slightly redshifted, and one broader and blueshifted (cz = -135 km/s). We demonstrate that the physical states of the UV and X-ray absorbers are hard to reconcile with a single, purely collisionally ionized, equilibrium plasma. We propose, instead, that the X-ray and, at least the broader and blueshifted UV absorber are produced in a low density intergalactic plasma (partly photoionized by the diffuse extragalactic X-ray background), collapsing towards our Galaxy, consistent with the predictions of a Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM) from numerical simulations. We find that any reasonable solution requires overabundance of Ne compared to O by a factor of ~2, with respect to the solar value and propose several scenarios to account for this observation.

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