The X-ray source content of the XMM-Newton Galactic Plane Survey
C. Motch, R. Warwick, M. S. Cropper, F. Carrera, P. Guillout, F.X., Pineau, M. W. Pakull, S. Rosen, A. Schwope, J. Tedds, N. Webb, I. Negueruela, and M.G. Watson

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes the brightest X-ray sources in the Galactic Plane, revealing diverse objects including massive stars, binaries, and cataclysmic variables through optical follow-up and catalog cross-correlations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed optical identification and classification of X-ray sources in the Galactic Plane survey, including discovery of new stellar and binary systems.
Findings
Active coronae account for 16 of 30 sources.
Many hard X-ray sources are massive stars with intermediate luminosities.
Discovery of new CVs, including a likely magnetic system.
Abstract
We report the results of an optical campaign carried out by the XMM-Newton Survey Science Centre with the specific goal of identifying the brightest X-ray sources in the XMM-Newton Galactic Plane Survey of Hands et al. (2004). In addition to photometric and spectroscopic observations obtained at the ESO-VLT and ESO-3.6m, we used cross-correlations with the 2XMMi, USNO-B1.0, 2MASS and GLIMPSE catalogues to progress the identification process. Active coronae account for 16 of the 30 identified X-ray sources. Many of the identified hard X-ray sources are associated with massive stars emitting at intermediate X-ray luminosities of 10^32-34 erg/s. Among these are a very absorbed likely hyper-luminous star with X-ray/optical spectra and luminosities comparable with those of eta Carina, a new X-ray selected WN8 Wolf-Rayet star, a new Be/X-ray star belonging to the growing class of Gamma-Cas…
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