Multi-frequency Studies of Galactic X-ray Sources Populations. Hard X-ray Galactic sources of low to intermediate Lx; A search for isolated accreting black holes
C. Motch, M. W. Pakull

TL;DR
This study investigates the populations of Galactic X-ray sources at energies above 2 keV, identifying their types and constraining the surface density of isolated accreting black holes through optical follow-up observations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the nature of hard X-ray sources in the Galaxy and sets upper limits on the density of isolated black holes based on optical identification campaigns.
Findings
Most optically faint hard X-ray sources are CVs and Me stars.
No likely black hole counterparts found in the sample.
Upper limit of 0.2 black holes per square degree at specified flux level.
Abstract
Our Galaxy harbours a large population of X-ray sources of intermediate to low X-ray luminosity (typically Lx from 10^27 to 10^34 erg/s). At energies below 2 keV, active coronae completely dominate the X-ray landscape. However, the nature and the properties of Galactic sources detected at energies > 2 keV is much less constrained. Optical follow-up spectroscopic observations show that in addition to cataclysmic variables (CVs) and very active stellar coronae, massive stars (colliding wind binaries, quiescent high-mass X-ray binaries and Gamma-Cas analogs) account for a sizable fraction of the Galactic hard X-ray sources at medium flux (Fx > 10^-13 erg/s/cm^2). Cross-correlations of the 2XMM-DR3 catalogue with 2MASS and GLIMPSE confirm the presence above 2 keV of a large population of coronally active binaries, probably of the BY Dra and RS CVn types, in addition to many distant and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Scientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
