The deep XMM-Newton Survey of M 31
H. Stiele, W. Pietsch, F. Haberl, D. Hatzidimitriou, R. Barnard, B. F., Williams, A. K. H. Kong, and U. Kolb

TL;DR
This comprehensive XMM-Newton survey of M 31 identified nearly 1900 X-ray sources, analyzed their properties, and classified many, revealing insights into the galaxy's X-ray source populations and their associations with star-forming regions.
Contribution
First complete X-ray survey of M 31 combining archival and new data, creating a large catalog and classifying sources based on multi-wavelength analysis.
Findings
Identified 914 new X-ray sources in M 31.
Linked many SNRs to star-forming regions, indicating their origin in type II supernovae.
Detected numerous X-ray binaries, including low and high mass types, with some candidates identified through spectral analysis.
Abstract
Aims. M 31 has been completely imaged for the first time obtaining a luminosity lower limit ~10^35 erg s-1 in the 0.2-4.5 keV band. Our XMM-Newton EPIC survey combines archival observations with observations taken between June 2006 and February 2008. The main goal of the paper is a study of the X-ray source population of M 31. Methods. An X-ray catalogue of 1897 sources was created; 914 were detected for the first time. Source classification and identification were based on X-ray hardness ratios, spatial extent of the sources, and by cross correlating with catalogues in the X-ray, optical, infrared and radio wavelengths. We also analysed the long-term variability of the X-ray sources. Results. Fourteen of the 30 supersoft source candidates represent supersoft emission of optical novae. Many of the 25 supernova remnants (SNRs) and 31 SNR candidates lie within the 10 kpc dust ring and…
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