X-ray Point Source Populations Constituting the Galactic Ridge X-ray Emission
Kumiko Morihana, Masahiro Tsujimoto, Tessei Yoshida, and Ken Ebisawa

TL;DR
This study analyzes individual X-ray point sources in the Galactic Ridge to understand their nature and contribution to diffuse X-ray emission, revealing that different source types dominate at various flux levels and contribute to specific spectral features.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification and spectral analysis of X-ray point sources in the Galactic Ridge, clarifying their roles in the diffuse X-ray emission.
Findings
Group A non-thermal sources are mostly AGNs.
Thermal sources are likely white dwarf binaries.
Galactic sources dominate at fainter fluxes.
Abstract
Apparently diffuse X-ray emission has been known to exist along the central quarter of the Galactic Plane since the beginning of the X-ray astronomy, which is referred to as the Galactic Ridge X-ray emission (GRXE). Recent deep X-ray observations have shown that numerous X-ray point sources account for a large fraction of the GRXE in the hard band (2-8 keV). However, the nature of these sources is poorly understood. Using the deepest X-ray observations made in the Chandra Bulge Field (Revnivtsev et al., 2009,2011), we present the result of a coherent photometric and spectroscopic analysis of individual X-ray point sources for the purpose of constraining their nature and deriving their fractional contributions to the hard band continuum and Fe K\alpha line emission of the GRXE. Based on the X-ray color-color diagram, we divided the point sources into three groups: A (hard), B (soft and…
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