Identification of a Population of X-ray Emitting Massive Stars in the Galactic Plane
G. E. Anderson (1), B. M. Gaensler (1), D. L. Kaplan (2), B. Posselt, (3), P. O. Slane (3), S. S. Murray (3), J. C. Mauerhan (4), R. A. Benjamin, (5), C. L. Brogan (6), D. Chakrabarty (7), J. J. Drake (3), J. E. Drew (8),, J. E. Grindlay (3), J. Hong (3), T. J. W. Lazio (9)

TL;DR
This study identifies four massive X-ray emitting stars in the Galactic plane, revealing a potential large population of similar systems, with detailed multi-wavelength observations confirming their classifications and likely binary nature.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery and characterization of four previously unidentified massive stars emitting X-rays, using multi-wavelength data to suggest they are colliding-wind binaries, expanding knowledge of such systems in the Milky Way.
Findings
All four sources are massive stars with specific spectral types.
Two sources are luminous, hard X-ray emitters with Fe XXV lines.
The other two are less luminous with softer spectra, likely also colliding-wind binaries.
Abstract
We present X-ray, infrared, optical and radio observations of four previously unidentified Galactic plane X-ray sources, AX J163252-4746, AX J184738-0156, AX J144701-5919 and AX J144547-5931. Detection of each source with the Chandra X-ray Observatory has provided sub-arcsecond localizations, which we use to identify bright infrared counterparts to all four objects. Infrared and optical spectroscopy of these counterparts demonstrate that all four X-ray sources are extremely massive stars, with spectral classifications Ofpe/WN9 (AX J163252-4746), WN7 (AX J184738-0156 = WR121a), WN7-8h (AX J144701-5919) and OIf+ (AX J144547-5931). AX J163252-4746 and AX J184738-0156 are both luminous, hard, X-ray emitters with strong Fe XXV emission lines in their X-ray spectra at ~6.7 keV. The multi-wavelength properties of AX J163252-4746 and AX J184738-0156 are not consistent with isolated massive…
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