Near-Infrared Counterparts to Chandra X-ray Sources toward the Galactic Center. I. Statistics and a Catalog of Candidates
Jon C. Mauerhan, Michael P. Muno, Mark R. Morris, Franz E. Bauer,, Shogo Nishiyama, Tetsuya Nagata

TL;DR
This paper provides a catalog of over 5,000 candidate infrared counterparts to X-ray sources in the Galactic center, analyzing their properties and potential classifications to aid future spectroscopic identification.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive catalog of infrared counterparts to X-ray sources near the Galactic center, including statistical analysis and classification of these sources.
Findings
5.8% of hard X-ray sources have real IR counterparts
Most red counterparts are likely WR/O stars, HMXBs, or symbiotics
Approximately 39.4% of soft X-ray sources have blue IR counterparts
Abstract
We present a catalog of 5184 candidate infrared counterparts to X-ray sources detected towards the Galactic center. The X-ray sample contains 9017 point sources detected in this region by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, including data from a recent deep survey of the central 2 x 0.8 deg of the Galactic plane. A total of 6760 of these sources have hard X-ray colors, and the majority of them lie near the Galactic center, while most of the remaining 2257 soft X-ray sources lie in the foreground. We cross-correlated the X-ray source positions with the 2MASS and SIRIUS near-infrared catalogs, which collectively contain stars with a 10-sigma limiting flux of K_s<=15.6 mag. In order to distinguish absorbed infrared sources near the Galactic center from those in the foreground, we defined red and blue sources as those which have H-K_s>=0.9 and <=0.9 mag, respectively. We find that 5.8(1.5)% of…
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