X-ray source populations in the Galactic Plane

Abstract

We present the first results from the Galactic Plane Survey (XGPS). In the first phase of the programme, 22 pointings were used to cover a region of approximately three square degrees between 19 -- 22 in Galactic longitude and 0.6 in latitude. In total we have resolved over 400 point X-ray sources, at ≥ 5 σ significance, down to a flux limit of 2 × 10-14 (2--10 keV). The combination of the XGPS measurements in the hard X-ray band with the results from earlier surveys carried out by and reveals the form of the low-latitude X-ray source counts over 4 decades of flux. It appears that extragalactic sources dominate below 10-13 (2--10 keV), with a predominantly Galactic source population present above this flux threshold. The nature of the faint Galactic population observed by remains uncertain, although cataclysmic variables and RS CVn systems may contribute substantially. observes an enhanced surface brightness in the Galactic plane in the 2--6 keV band associated with Galactic Ridge X-ray Emission (GRXE). The integrated contribution of Galactic sources plus the breakthrough of extragalactic signal accounts for up to 20 per cent of the observed surface brightness. The XGPS results are consistent with the picture suggested from a deep observation in the Galactic plane, namely that the bulk of the GRXE is truly diffuse.

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