X-ray photons from energetic sources such as gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) can be
scattered on dust clouds in the Milky Way, creating a time-evolving halo around
the GRB position. X-ray observations of such halos allow the measurement of
dust clouds distances in the Galaxy on which the scattering occurs. We present
the first systematic comparison of the distances to scattering regions derived
from GRB halos with the 3D dust distribution derived from recently published
optical-to-near infrared extinction maps. GRB halos were observed around 7
sources by the Swift XRT and the XMM-Newton EPIC instruments, namely GRB
031203, GRB 050713A, GRB 050724, GRB 061019, GRB 070129, GRB 160623A and GRB
221009A. We used four 3D extinction maps that exploit photometric data from
different surveys and apply diverse algorithms for the 3D mapping of
extinction, and compared the X-ray halo-derived distances with the local maxima
in the 3D extinction density distribution. We found that in all GRBs we can
find at least one local maximum in the 3D dust extinction map that is in
agreement with the dust distance measured from X-ray rings. For GRBs with
multiple X-ray rings, the dust distance measurements coincide with at least 3
maxima in the extinction map for GRB 160623A, and 5 maxima for GRB 221009A. The
agreement of these independent distance measurements shows that the methods
used to create dust extinction maps may potentially be optimized by the X-ray
halo observations from GRBs.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA