Crossing the Gould Belt in the Orion vicinity
K. Biazzo (1), J. M. Alcal\'a (1), E. Covino (1), M. F. Sterzik (2),, P. Guillout (3), C. Chavarria-K.(4), A. Frasca (5), R. Raddi (6)((1) INAF -, Osservatorio Astronomico di Capodimonte, Napoli, Italy, (2) ESO - European, Southern Observatory, Santiago, Chile

TL;DR
This study maps the distribution of X-ray sources in Orion, identifying young stellar populations, new stellar groups, and the relation of these populations to the Gould Belt and molecular clouds, using optical spectroscopy and population synthesis models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the spatial and physical properties of X-ray selected stars in Orion, revealing new young stellar groups and clarifying the structure of stellar populations in the region.
Findings
Identification of two new young stellar groups, X-ray Clump 0534+22 and X-ray Clump 0430-08.
Discovery of a dispersed young population aligned with the Gould Belt.
Confirmation of three distinct stellar populations: clustered, dispersed young, and field stars.
Abstract
We present a study of the large-scale spatial distribution of 6482 RASS X-ray sources in approximately 5000 deg^2 in the direction of Orion. We examine the astrophysical properties of a sub-sample of ~100 optical counterparts, using optical spectroscopy. This sub-sample is used to investigate the space density of the RASS young star candidates by comparing X-ray number counts with Galactic model predictions. We characterize the observed sub-sample in terms of spectral type, lithium content, radial and rotational velocities, as well as iron abundance. A population synthesis model is then applied to analyze the stellar content of the RASS in the studied area. We find that stars associated with the Orion star-forming region do show a high lithium content. A population of late-type stars with lithium equivalent widths larger than Pleiades stars of the same spectral type (hence younger than…
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