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A&A 419, 837-848 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20034421
The 2-8 keV cosmic X-ray background spectrum as observed with XMM-Newton
A. De Luca1, 2 and S. Molendi11 Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica, Sezione di Milano "G. Occhialini" - CNR v.Bassini 15, 20133 Milano, Italy
2 Università di Milano Bicocca, Dipartimento di Fisica, P.za della Scienza 3, 20126 Milano, Italy
(Received 30 September 2003 / Accepted 17 November 2003 )
Abstract
We have measured the spectrum of the Cosmic X-ray Background (CXB)
in the 2-8 keV range with the high throughput EPIC/MOS instrument onboard
XMM-Newton. A large sample of high galactic latitude observations was used,
covering a total solid angle of 5.5 square degrees. Our study is based on a
very
careful characterization and subtraction of the instrumental background, which
is crucial for a robust measurement of the faintest diffuse source of the
X-ray
sky. The CXB spectrum is consistent with a power law having a photon index
0.06 and a normalization of 2.46
0.09 photons cm
-2 s
-1 sr
-1 keV
-1 at 3 keV (~11.6 photons cm
-2 s
-1 sr
-1 keV
-1 at 1 keV), corresponding to a 2-10 keV flux of
(2.24
0.16)
10-11 erg cm
-2 s
-1 deg
-1
(90% confidence level, including the absolute flux calibration uncertainty).
Our results
are in excellent agreement with two of the most recent CXB measurements,
performed with BeppoSAX LECS/MECS data (Vecchi et al. 1999) and with an
independent analysis of XMM-Newton EPIC/MOS data (Lumb et al. 2002),
providing a very strong constraint to the absolute sky surface brightness in
this energy range, so far affected by an ~40% uncertainty. Our measurement
implies that the fraction of CXB resolved by the recent deep X-ray
observations in the 2-10 keV band is of
80
7% (1
), suggesting the existence
of a new population of faint sources, largely undetected within the current
sensitivity limits of the deepest X-ray surveys.
Key words: X-rays: diffuse background -- cosmology: diffuse radiation -- surveys -- instrumentations: detectors
Offprint request: A. De Luca, deluca@mi.iasf.cnr.it
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