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X-ray Luminosity Evolution

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X-ray Luminosity Evolution

In this Section we examine evolution of the number of binary X-ray sources in an arbitrary galaxy. The first calculation of such an evolution was performed by Tatarintzeva et al. (1989).[187]

We have assumed that an X-ray source appears in a binary in the following basic cases:

We also estimated the luminosity of the X-ray radiation from an isolated NS due to accretion from the interstellar medium.  However, the problem with its X-ray radiation spectrum remains unsolved because no objects of this type have been observed so far. No intrinsic soft X-ray emission from pulsars  (similar to that observed by ROSAT) was considered. But we take into account the absorption of radiation in the stellar wind from a normal companion and in the surrounding matter.

The total X-ray luminosity from different types of objects is traced separately at any instant. First, we calculated the evolution of the X-ray luminosity  tex2html_wrap_inline11895 assuming a delta-function (instantaneous) shape for the star formation rate. Then, treating tex2html_wrap_inline11895 as a Green function, evolution of the X-ray luminosity from a galaxy with an arbitrary star formation rate tex2html_wrap_inline11899 can be represented as

equation4277

The total hard X-ray luminosity is predominantly due to the binaries consisting of an accreting NS with a giant or supergiant companion which does not fill its Roche lobe (``A+II'' objects). The total number of such objects is in a good agreement with the observational data (see Table 7).

The X-ray luminosity evolution after an instantaneous star formation burst  for t >2 tex2html_wrap_inline8845 tex2html_wrap_inline10259  yr can be rather well fitted by a power law:

equation4283

(here N is the total number of stars in the galaxy). This fairly strong dependence on time in principle may be observed in remote elliptical galaxies. 


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Mike E. Prokhorov
Sat Feb 22 18:38:13 MSK 1997