The Stellar Age Dependence of X-ray Emission from Normal Star-Forming Galaxies in the GOODS Fields
Woodrow Gilbertson, Bret Lehmer, Keith Doore, Rafael Eufrasio, Antara, Basu-Zych, William Brandt, Tassos Fragos, Kristen Garofali, Konstantinos, Kovlakas, Bin Luo, Paolo Tozzi, Fabio Vito, Benjamin F. Williams, Yongquan, Xue

TL;DR
This study models how X-ray emission from normal star-forming galaxies depends on stellar age, revealing significant decline in X-ray luminosity relative to stellar mass over cosmic time and changes in spectral hardness.
Contribution
It introduces an age-dependent model of X-ray emission in galaxies, linking X-ray properties to stellar population age and metallicity, based on spectral energy distribution fitting.
Findings
X-ray luminosity per stellar mass declines by ~1000 times from 0 to 10 Gyr.
X-ray spectral hardness increases with galaxy age.
Low-metallicity galaxies tend to have higher X-ray luminosity per stellar mass.
Abstract
The Chandra Deep Field-South and North surveys (CDFs) provide unique windows into the cosmic history of X-ray emission from normal (non-active) galaxies. Scaling relations of normal galaxy X-ray luminosity (L_X) with star formation rate (SFR) and stellar mass (M_star) have been used to show that the formation rates of low-mass and high-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs and HMXBs, respectively) evolve with redshift across z = 0-2 following L_HMXB/SFR ~ 1 + z and L_LMXB/M_star ~ (1 + z)^{2-3}. However, these measurements alone do not directly reveal the physical mechanisms behind the redshift evolution of X-ray binaries (XRBs). We derive star-formation histories for a sample of 344 normal galaxies in the CDFs, using spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting of FUV-to-FIR photometric data, and construct a self-consistent, age-dependent model of the X-ray emission from the galaxies. Our model…
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