Abstract

Context.The eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS), completed in survey mode during the calibration and performance verification phase of the eROSITA instrument on Spectrum Roentgen Gamma, delivers data at and beyond the final depth of the 4-yr eROSITA all-sky survey (eRASS:8),f0.5–2 keV= 1.1 × 10−14erg s−1cm−2, over 140 deg2. It provides the first view of normal galaxy X-ray emission from X-ray binaries (XRBs) and the hot interstellar medium at the full depth of eRASS:8.Aims.We used the Heraklion Extragalactic Catalogue (HECATE) of galaxies to correlate with eFEDS X-ray sources and identify X-ray detected normal galaxies. This flux-limited X-ray survey is relatively free from selection effects and enables the study of integrated normal galaxy X-ray emission and its relation to galaxy parameters such as the stellar mass, star formation rate (SFR), and metallicity.Methods.We cross-correlated 32 646 eFEDS X-ray sources to 1181 HECATE normal galaxies and obtained 94 matches. We classified galaxies as star-forming, early-type, composite, and active galactic nuclei (AGN) using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and Six-degree Field (6dF) optical spectroscopy.Results.The eFEDS field harbours 37 normal galaxies: 36 late-type (star-forming) galaxies and one early-type galaxy. There are 1.9 times as many normal galaxies as predicted by scaling relations via simulations, with an overabundance of late-type galaxies and a dearth of early-type galaxies. When compared with empirical relations, eFEDS dwarf galaxies with a high specific SFR have elevatedLX/SFR at a fixed specific SFR and metallicity, indicating an increase in XRB emission due to low metallicity. We expect that eRASS:8 will detect 12 500 normal galaxies, the majority of which will be star-forming, with the caveat that there are unclassified sources in eFEDS and galaxy catalogue incompleteness issues that could increase the actual number of detected galaxies over these current estimates.Conclusions.eFEDS observations detected a rare population of galaxies – the metal-poor dwarf starbursts – that do not follow known scaling relations. eRASS is expected to discover significant numbers of these high-redshift analogues, which are important for studying the heating of the intergalactic medium at high redshift. Further investigation of the hot gas emission from normal galaxies and stochastic effects in the dwarf galaxy population are required to constrain their X-ray output.

Highlights

  • Understanding the nature of X-ray emission from normal galaxies, i.e., galaxies without an active galactic nucleus (AGN), is critically important for several reasons

  • Predicted vs. Observed Normal Galaxy X-ray Flux In Fig. 6 we show the eROSITA flux for eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS) sources compared with the predicted flux based on prescriptions for the Xray emission from normal galaxies (XRBs + hot gas)

  • The eFEDS-Heraklion Extragalactic Catalogue (HECATE) matches that are classified as normal galaxies can be compared with previous normal galaxy studies as a result of the ancillary galaxy parameter measurements that are available (SFR, stellar mass, metallicity)

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the nature of X-ray emission from normal galaxies, i.e., galaxies without an active galactic nucleus (AGN), is critically important for several reasons. In addition to including the progenitor population for gravitational waves detected by, e.g., Advanced LIGO (Abbott et al 2019), the collective X-ray output from XRBs can rival that of accreting SMBH (AGN) at the critical epochs of reionization and Cosmic Dawn (6 z 20) when the first galaxies in the Universe were forming (Fragos et al 2013; Mesinger et al 2014; Pacucci et al 2014).

Sample Selection
Galaxy Catalogue
Catalogue Matching and Source Classification
Purity of the eFEDS-HECATE Normal Galaxies
Metallicity Estimates
Scaling with Specific Star Formation Rate
Scaling With Metallicity
Discussion
Quantifying Normal Galaxies with eROSITA
Outliers in The Star-Forming Regime
Early-Type Galaxies
Implications for eRASS Normal Galaxy Detections
Findings
38 NGC1569
Conclusions

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