Comparing Chandra and Hubble in the Northern Disk of M31
Benjamin F. Williams, Margaret Lazzarini, Paul Plucinsky, Manami, Sasaki, Vallia Antoniou, Neven Vulic, Michael Eracleous, Knox S. Long,, Breanna Binder, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Alexia R. Lewis, Daniel R. Weisz

TL;DR
This study combines Chandra X-ray and Hubble optical data to identify and classify X-ray sources in M31's disk, revealing their nature and stellar environment, and highlighting the challenges in detecting faint counterparts.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive cross-matched catalog of X-ray sources with optical counterparts in M31, improving source classification and understanding of their stellar populations.
Findings
373 X-ray sources detected, 170 new.
188 optical counterparts identified, including background galaxies and stars.
Young stellar populations associated with some X-ray sources.
Abstract
The X-ray source populations within galaxies are typically difficult to identify and classify from X-ray data alone. We are able to break through this barrier by combining deep new Chandra ACIS-I observations with extensive Hubble Space Telescope imaging from the PHAT survey of the M31 disk. We detect 373 X-ray sources down to 0.35-8.0 keV flux of 10 erg cm s over 0.4 square degrees, 170 of which are reported for the first time. We identify optical counterpart candidates for 188 of the 373 sources, after using the HST data to correct the absolute astrometry of our Chandra imaging to 0.1. While 58 of these 188 are associated with point sources potentially in M31, over half (107) of the counterpart candidates are extended background galaxies, 5 are star clusters, 12 are foreground stars, and 6 are supernova remnants. Sources with no clear counterpart candidate are…
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