The stellar population of the Rosat North Ecliptic Pole survey. II. Spectral analysis
L. Affer, G. Micela, T. Morel

TL;DR
This study uses spectral analysis of X-ray detected stars from the ROSAT NEP survey to determine their ages, revealing a predominantly young to intermediate-age stellar population and evidence of a recent star formation burst.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral age analysis of NEP X-ray sources, distinguishing young stars from binaries and confirming a recent increase in stellar birthrate.
Findings
Most stars are young or intermediate-age, consistent with a 4-billion-year population.
Evidence of a star formation burst in the last 100 million years.
Some fast rotators may be old binary systems.
Abstract
X-ray surveys allow to identify young, main-sequence stars in the solar neighborhood. Young, stellar samples, selected according to their activity, can be used to determine the stellar birthrate in the last billion years. The ROSAT North Ecliptic Pole survey (NEP), with its moderately deep sensitivity (fluxes ~10^(-14) erg cm^(-2) sec^(-1)), is the best survey, to date, able to sample the intermediate-age (10^8 - 10^9 years) nearby population. The identification process of NEP X-ray sources resulted in 144 X-ray sources having a normal stellar counterpart, with an excess of yellow stars with respect to model predictions. We want to determine if these X-ray active stars are young or intermediate-age stars, or active binaries. We acquired high-resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio optical spectra, to determine the age and physical properties of the NEP X-ray-detected stellar sources. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
