A Chandra Study of The Stellar X-ray Emissivity of Globular Clusters in M\,31 Bulge
Xiao-jie Xu, Zhiyuan Li

TL;DR
This study uses deep Chandra observations to measure the X-ray emissivity of globular clusters in M31, finding results consistent with Milky Way clusters and insights into how cluster mass affects X-ray sources.
Contribution
It provides the first stacking analysis of M31 globular clusters' X-ray emissivity, comparing it with Milky Way clusters and exploring the impact of cluster mass on X-ray source populations.
Findings
X-ray emissivity of M31 GCs is consistent with MW GCs.
Massive GCs have marginally higher X-ray luminosities.
Higher mass GCs show lower X-ray emissivity, indicating more efficient destruction of X-ray sources.
Abstract
The X-ray emissivity (i.e., luminosity per unit stellar mass) of globular clusters are an important indicator of their dynamical evolution history. Based on deep archival \textit{Chandra} observations, we report a stacking analysis of 44 globular clusters (GCs) with 0.5-8 keV luminosities in the M\,31 bulge, which are supposed to be dominated by cataclysmic variables (CVs) and coronally active binaries (ABs). We obtain a significant detection at level in 0.5-8 keV band. The average X-ray luminosity per GC and the average X-ray emissivity are determined to be and , respectively. Both of these values are consistent with those of MW GCs. What's more, the measured emissivity of M31 GCs is also consistent with that of the MW field stars.…
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