The Evolution of Normal Galaxy X-ray Emission Through Cosmic History: Constraints from the 6 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South
B.D. Lehmer, A.R. Basu-Zych, S. Mineo, W.N. Brandt, R.T. Eufrasio, T., Fragos, A.E. Hornschemeier, B. Luo, Y.Q. Xue, F.E. Bauer, M. Gilfanov, P., Ranalli, D.P. Schneider, O. Shemmer, P. Tozzi, J.R. Trump, C. Vignali, J.-X., Wang, M. Yukita, and A. Zezas

TL;DR
This study investigates how normal galaxy X-ray emissions have evolved from redshift 0 to 7, revealing that X-ray binary populations' contributions increase with redshift and are better modeled by relations involving SFR, stellar mass, and redshift.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical constraints on the redshift evolution of X-ray binary populations' emissions and their scaling relations with galaxy properties.
Findings
X-ray luminosity from LMXBs scales with (1+z)^{2-3}
X-ray luminosity from HMXBs scales with (1+z)
Scaling relations involving SFR, stellar mass, and redshift improve modeling accuracy.
Abstract
We present measurements of the evolution of normal-galaxy X-ray emission from 0-7 using local galaxies and galaxy samples in the 6 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S) survey. The majority of the CDF-S galaxies are observed at rest-frame energies above 2 keV, where the emission is expected to be dominated by X-ray binary (XRB) populations; however, hot gas is expected to provide small contributions to the observed- frame < 1 keV emission at . We show that a single scaling relation between X-ray luminosity () and star-formation rate (SFR) is insufficient for characterizing the average X-ray emission at all redshifts. We establish that scaling relations involving not only SFR, but also stellar mass () and redshift, provide significantly improved characterizations of the average X-ray emission from normal galaxy populations at 0-7. We…
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