Infrared identification of hard X-ray sources in the Galaxy
A. Nebot G\'omez-Mor\'an, C. Motch, F.-X. Pineau, F. J. Carrera, M. W., Pakull, F. Riddick

TL;DR
This study cross-matched X-ray and infrared data to identify and classify low- to intermediate-luminosity X-ray sources in the Galactic Plane, revealing their nature and discovering new high-mass star systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive infrared identification and classification of faint X-ray sources in the Galaxy, including new candidate high-mass X-ray binaries and gamma-Cas analogues.
Findings
690 X-ray sources identified with infrared counterparts
Majority of soft sources are stars, mainly active coronae
Many hard sources are high-mass X-ray binaries or gamma-Cas analogues
Abstract
The nature of the low- to intermediate-luminosity (Lx erg s) source population revealed in hard band (2-10 keV) X-ray surveys of the Galactic Plane is poorly understood. To overcome such problem we cross-correlated the XMM-Newton 3XMM-DR4 survey with the infrared 2MASS and GLIMPSE catalogues. We identified reliable X-ray-infrared associations for 690 sources. We selected 173 sources having hard X-ray spectra, typical of hard X-ray high-mass stars (kTkeV), and 517 sources having soft X-ray spectra, typical of active coronae. About of the soft sources are classified in the literature: as stars, with a minor fraction of WR stars. Roughly of the hard sources are classified in the literature: as high-mass X-ray stars single or in binary systems (WR, Be and HMXBs), with a small fraction of G and B stars. We…
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