We report Chandra ACIS observations of the fields of 4 QSOs showing strong
extended optical emission-line regions. Two of these show no evidence for
significant extended X-ray emission. The remaining two fields, those of 3C
249.1 and 4C 37.43, show discrete (but resolved) X-ray sources at distances
ranging from ~10 to ~40 kpc from the nucleus. In addition, 4C 37.43 also may
show a region of diffuse X-ray emission extending out to ~65 kpc and centered
on the QSO. It has been suggested that extended emission-line regions such as
these may originate in the cooling of a hot intragroup medium. We do not detect
a general extended medium in any of our fields, and the upper limits we can
place on its presence indicate cooling times of at least a few 10^9 years. The
discrete X-ray emission sources we detect cannot be explained as the X-ray jets
frequently seen associated with radio-loud quasars, nor can they be due to
electron scattering of nuclear emission. The most plausible explanation is that
they result from high-speed shocks from galactic superwinds resulting either
from a starburst in the QSO host galaxy or from the activation of the QSO
itself. Evidence from densities and velocities found from studies of the
extended optical emission around QSOs also supports this interpretation.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. 9 pages including 5 figure