HST/ACS Imaging of Omega Centauri: Optical Counterparts of Chandra X-Ray Sources
Adrienne M. Cool (SFSU), Daryl Haggard (NU/CIERA), Tersi Arias, (SFSU/UCLA), Michelle Brochmann (SFSU/UW), Jason Dorfman (SFSU/Bays Mountain, Park Obs.), April Gafford (SFSU/JATO Aviation), Vivian White (SFSU/ASP), Jay, Anderson (STScI)

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope imaging to identify optical counterparts of X-ray sources in Omega Centauri, revealing new candidate cataclysmic variables, active binaries, and other stellar objects, enhancing understanding of the cluster's X-ray source population.
Contribution
First comprehensive optical identification of X-ray sources in Omega Centauri, including new candidate CVs, active binaries, and insights into the cluster's stellar populations.
Findings
Identified 59 optical counterparts for X-ray sources, with 27 candidate CVs.
Discovered a group of stars possibly linked to metal-rich populations with enhanced X-ray activity.
Reported the largest number of red stragglers (sub-subgiants) in any globular cluster.
Abstract
We present results of a search for optical counterparts of X-ray sources in and toward the globular cluster Omega Centauri (NGC 5139) using the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on the Hubble Space Telescope. The ACS data consist of a mosaic of Wide Field Channel (WFC) images obtained using F625W, F435W, and F658N filters; with 9 pointings we cover the central ~10'x10' of the cluster and encompass 109 known Chandra sources. We find promising optical counterparts for 59 of the sources, ~40 of which are likely to be associated with the cluster. These include 27 candidate cataclysmic variables (CVs), 24 of which are reported here for the first time. Fourteen of the CV candidates are very faint, with absolute magnitudes in the range M_625 = 10.4 - 12.6, making them comparable in brightness to field CVs near the period minimum discovered in the SDSS (Gansicke et al. 2009). Additional optical…
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