The stellar distribution derived from an H and KS-band survey
of the central region of our Galaxy is compared with the Fe XXV Kα (6.7
keV) line intensity observed with the Suzaku satellite. The survey is for the
Galactic coordinates ∣l∣≲3∘.0 and ∣b∣≲1∘.0
(equivalent to 0.8 kpc × 0.3 kpc for R0=8 kpc), and the
number-density distribution N(KS,0;l,b) of stars is derived
using the extinction-corrected magnitude KS,0=10.5. This is deep
enough to probe the old red giant population and in turn to estimate the (l,
b) distribution of faint X-ray point sources such as coronally active
binaries and cataclysmic variables. In the Galactic plane (b=0∘),
N(10.5;l,b) increases to the Galactic center as ∣l∣−0.30±0.03 in
the range of −0∘.1≥l≥−0∘.7, but this increase is
significantly slower than the increase (∣l∣−0.44±0.02 ) of the Fe XXV
Kα line intensity. If normalized with the ratios in the outer region
1∘.5≤∣l∣≤2∘.8, where faint X-ray point sources are
argued to dominate the diffuse Galactic X-ray ridge emission, the excess of the
Fe XXV Kα line intensity over the stellar number density is at least a
factor of two at ∣l∣=0∘.1. This indicates that a significant part of
the Galactic center diffuse emission arises from a truly diffuse optically-thin
thermal plasma, and not from an unresolved collection of faint X-ray point
sources related to the old stellar population.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in PASJ. Some bold-font
characters were replace