An Empirical Framework Characterizing the Metallicity and Star-Formation History Dependence of X-ray Binary Population Formation and Emission in Galaxies
Bret D. Lehmer, Erik B. Monson, Rafael T. Eufrasio, Amirnezam Amiri,, Keith Doore, Antara Basu-Zych, Kristen Garofali, Lidia Oskinova, Jeff J., Andrews, Vallia Antoniou, Robel Geda, Jenny E. Greene, Konstantinos Kovlakas,, Margaret Lazzarini, and Chris T. Richardson

TL;DR
This paper introduces an empirical model linking the metallicity and star-formation history of galaxies to their X-ray binary populations, providing insights into their evolution and emission characteristics across different galaxy types.
Contribution
The study develops a comprehensive empirical framework calibrated with extensive data, revealing how X-ray binary luminosity functions depend on galaxy age and metallicity, and offers benchmarks for future models.
Findings
XLF normalization declines by 2-3 dex from 10 Myr to 10 Gyr.
XLF shape steepens with increasing age and metallicity.
Predicted X-ray scaling relations align with previous observations.
Abstract
We present a new empirical framework modeling the metallicity and star-formation history (SFH) dependence of X-ray luminous ( ergs s) point-source population luminosity functions (XLFs) in normal galaxies. We expect the X-ray point-source populations are dominated by X-ray binaries (XRBs), with contributions from supernova remnants near the low luminosity end of our observations. Our framework is calibrated using the collective statistical power of 3,731 X-ray detected point-sources within 88 Chandra-observed galaxies at 40 Mpc that span broad ranges of metallicity ( 0.03-2 ), SFH, and morphology (dwarf irregulars, late-types, and early-types). Our best-fitting models indicate that the XLF normalization per unit stellar mass declines by 2-3 dex from 10 Myr to 10 Gyr, with a slower age decline for low-metallicity populations. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
