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A new measurement of the cosmic X-ray background

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journal contribution
posted on 2012-10-24, 09:06 authored by A. Moretti, C. Pagani, G. Cusumano, S. Campana, M. Perri, A. Abbey, M. Ajello, A. P. Beardmore, D. Burrows, G. Chincarini, O. Godet, C. Guidorzi, J. E. Hill, J. Kennea, J. Nousek, J. P. Osborne, G. Tagliaferri
Aims. We present a new measurement of the cosmic X-ray background (CXRB) in the 1.5-7 keV energy band, performed by exploiting the Swift X-ray telescope (XRT) data archive. We also present a CXRB spectral model in a wider energy band (1.5-200 keV), obtained by combining these data with the recently published Swift-BAT measurement. Methods. From the XRT archive we collect a complete sample of 126 high Galactic latitude gamma-ray burst (GRB) follow-up observations. This provides a total exposure of 7.5 Ms and a sky-coverage of ~7 square degrees which represents a serendipitous survey, well suited for a direct measurement of the CXRB in the 1.5-10 keV interval. Our work is based on a complete characterization of the instrumental background and an accurate measurement of the stray-light contamination and vignetting calibration. Results. We find that the CXRB spectrum in the 1.5-7 keV energy band can be equally well fitted by a single power-law with photon index $\Gamma=1.47\pm0.07$ or a single power-law with photon index $\Gamma=1.41\pm0.06$ and an exponential roll-off at 41 keV. The measured flux in the 2-10 keV energy band is $2.18 \pm0.13 \times10^{-11}$ erg cm-2 s-1 deg-2 in the 2-10 keV band. Combining Swift-XRT with Swift-BAT (15-200 keV) we find that, in the 1.5-200 keV band, the CXRB spectrum can be well described by two smoothly-joined power laws with the energy break at $29.0\pm0.5$ keV corresponding to a $
u F_{
u}$ peak located at $22.4\pm0.4$ keV. Conclusions. Taking advantage of both the Swift high energy instruments (XRT and BAT), we produce an analytical description of the CXRB spectrum over a wide (1.5-200 keV) energy band. This model is marginally consistent with the HEAO1 measurement (~10% higher) at energies higher than 20 keV, while it is significantly (30%) higher at low energies (2-10 keV).

Funding

This work is supported at OAB-INAF by ASI grant I/011/07/0, at PSU by NASA contract NAS5-00136. A.A., A.B., O.G. and J.O. acknowledge STFC funding.

History

Citation

Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2009, 493 (2), pp. 501-509

Published in

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Publisher

EDP Sciences for European Southern Observatory (ESO), Springer Verlag

issn

0004-6361

eissn

1432-0746

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/abs/2009/02/aa11197-08/aa11197-08.html

Language

English