4.0 Article

Normal galaxies in the all-sky survey by the eROSITA X-ray telescope of the Spectrum-X-Gamma observatory

Publisher

PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
DOI: 10.1134/S1063773709050028

Keywords

normal galaxies; ultraluminous X-ray sources; X-ray surveys; Spectrum-X-Gamma observatory

Funding

  1. EARA (European Association for Research in Astronomy) [MEST-CT-2004-504604]
  2. President of Russia [NSh-5579.2008.2]
  3. Russian Academy of Sciences

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We analyze the statistical properties of normal galaxies to be detected in the all-sky survey by the eROSITA X-ray telescope of the Spectrum-X-Gamma observatory. With the current configuration and parameters of the eROSITA telescope, the sensitivity of a 4-year-long all-sky survey will be a parts per thousand 10(-14) erg s(-1) in the 0.5-2 keV band. This will allow similar to(1.5-2) x 10(4) normal galaxies with approximately the same contribution of star-forming and elliptical galaxies to be detected. All galaxies of the X-ray survey are expected to enter into the existing far-infrared (IRAS) or near-infrared (2MASS) catalogs; the sample of star-forming galaxies will be approximately equivalent in sensitivity to the sample of star-forming galaxies in the IRAS catalog of infrared sources. Thus, a large homogeneous sample of normal galaxies with measured X-ray, near-infrared, and far-infrared fluxes will be formed. About 90% of the galaxies in the survey are located within similar to 200-400 Mpc. A typical (most probable) galaxy will have a luminosity log L (X) similar to 40.5-41.0, will be located at a distance of similar to 70-90 Mpc, and will be either a star-forming galaxy with a star formation rate of similar to 20M (aS (TM)) yr(-1) whose X-ray emission is produced by ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) or an elliptical galaxy with amass log M (*) similar to 11.3 emitting through to a hot interstellar gas. The galaxies within 35 Mpc will collectively contain similar to 10(2) ULXs with luminosities log L (X) > 40, similar to 80% of whichwill be the only luminous source in the galaxy. Thus, although the angular resolution of the eROSITA telescope is too low for the luminosity function of compact sources in galaxies to be studied in detail, the survey data will allow one to investigate its bright end and, possibly, to impose constraints on the maximum luminosity of ULXs.

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