The XMM-Newton SSC survey of the Galactic Plane
A. Nebot Gomez-Moran, C. Motch, X. Barcons, F. J. Carrera, M. T., Ceballos, M. Cropper, N. Grosso, P. Guillout, O. Herent, S. Mateos, L., Michel, J. P. Osborne, M. Pakull, F.-X. Pineau, J. P. Pye, T. P. Roberts, S., R. Rosen, A. D. Schwope, M. G. Watson, N. Webb

TL;DR
This survey of the Galactic plane using XMM-Newton provides a large, detailed catalog of low-to-medium luminosity X-ray sources, primarily active stars, enhancing understanding of the Galactic X-ray population at significant distances.
Contribution
It presents the largest spectroscopically identified sample of low-latitude X-ray sources at this flux level, expanding knowledge of their distribution and nature.
Findings
Detected 1319 X-ray sources in the Galactic plane.
Identified 316 sources, mostly active coronae of spectral types A-M.
Most identified sources are active stars within ~1 kpc.
Abstract
Many different classes of X-ray sources contribute to the Galactic landscape at high energies. Although the nature of the most luminous X-ray emitters is now fairly well understood, the population of low-to-medium X-ray luminosity (Lx = 10^27-10^34 erg/s) sources remains much less studied, our knowledge being mostly based on the observation of local members. The advent of wide field and high sensitivity X-ray telescopes such as XMM-Newton now offers the opportunity to observe this low-to-medium Lx population at large distances. We report on the results of a Galactic plane survey conducted by the XMM-Newton Survey Science Centre (SSC). Beyond its astrophysical goals, this survey aims at gathering a representative sample of identified X-ray sources at low latitude that can be used later on to statistically identify the rest of the serendipitous sources discovered in the Milky Way. The…
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