Most of the baryons in the present-day universe are thought to reside in
intergalactic space at temperatures of 10^5-10^7 K. X-ray emission from these
baryons contributes a modest (~10%) fraction of the ~ 1 keV background whose
prominence within the large-scale cosmic web depends on the amount of
non-gravitational energy injected into intergalactic space by supernovae and
AGNs. Here we show that the virialized regions of groups and clusters cover
over a third of the sky, creating a source-confusion problem that may hinder
X-ray searches for individual intercluster filaments and contaminate
observations of distant groups.Comment: accepted to ApJ Letters, 7 pages, 3 figure