Unveiling the soft X-ray source population towards the inner Galactic disk with XMM-Newton
Tong Bao, Gabriele Ponti, Frank Haberl, Samaresh Mondal, Mark R. Morris, Kaya Mori, Shifra Mandel, Xiao-jie Xu

TL;DR
This study classifies faint X-ray sources in the inner Galactic disk using XMM-Newton data, revealing that most are active stars, with a significant fraction of the Galactic Ridge X-ray Emission resolved into point sources, including compact objects.
Contribution
It combines eROSITA and XMM-Newton data with Gaia information to classify faint X-ray sources and proposes a hardness-ratio cut for source separation.
Findings
74% are coronal sources like active stars and binaries
6% of the Galactic Ridge X-ray Emission is resolved into point sources
Active stars dominate the soft X-ray flux, while X-ray binaries dominate the hard flux
Abstract
Across the Galactic disk lies a diverse population of X-ray sources, with the fainter end remaining poorly understood due to past survey sensitivity limits. We aim to classify and characterize faint X-ray sources detected in the eROSITA All-Sky Survey (eRASS1) towards the inner Galactic disk (, ) using deeper XMM-Newton observations (typical exposure of ). We analyzed 189 eRASS1 sources, combining X-ray spectral fitting (--) with Gaia astrometric and photometric data for robust classification. Our results show that the eRASS1 catalog towards the Galactic disk is overwhelmingly dominated by coronal sources (), primarily active stars and binaries, with being wind-powered massive stars and being accreting compact objects. We propose an empirical hardness-ratio cut…
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