A triple-star channel with two common envelope evolution phases produces merging black hole binaries with positive average χ_eff and a tail of negative values.
hub
The SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey: First X-ray catalogues and data release of the western Galactic hemisphere
32 Pith papers cite this work, alongside 332 external citations. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The eROSITA telescope array aboard the Spektrum Roentgen Gamma (SRG) satellite began surveying the sky in December 2019, with the aim of producing all-sky X-ray source lists and sky maps of an unprecedented depth. Here we present catalogues of both point-like and extended sources using the data acquired in the first six months of survey operations (eRASS1; completed June 2020) over the half sky whose proprietary data rights lie with the German eROSITA Consortium. We describe the observation process, the data analysis pipelines, and the characteristics of the X-ray sources. With nearly 930000 entries detected in the most sensitive 0.2-2.3 keV energy range, the eRASS1 main catalogue presented here increases the number of known X-ray sources in the published literature by more than 60%, and provides a comprehensive inventory of all classes of X-ray celestial objects, covering a wide range of physical processes. A smaller catalogue of 5466 sources detected in the less sensitive but harder 2.3-5 keV band is the result of the first true imaging survey of the entire sky above 2 keV. We show that the number counts of X-ray sources in eRASS1 are consistent with those derived over narrower fields by past X-ray surveys of a similar depth, and we explore the number counts variation as a function of the location in the sky. Adopting a uniform all-sky flux limit (at 50% completeness) of F_{0.5-2 keV} > 5 \times 10^{-14}$ erg\,s$^{-1}$\,cm$^{-2}$, we estimate that the eROSITA all-sky survey resolves into individual sources about 20% of the cosmic X-ray background in the 1-2 keV range. The catalogues presented here form part of the first data release (DR1) of the SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey. Beyond the X-ray catalogues, DR1 contains all detected and calibrated event files, source products (light curves and spectra), and all-sky maps. Illustrative examples of these are provided.
hub tools
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 32roles
background 1polarities
unclear 1representative citing papers
Red quasars are intrinsically X-ray weak with low alpha_OX values, tracing a distinct evolutionary stage of suppressed black hole accretion relative to stellar mass growth.
J1105+1452 transitioned to a megahertz peaked-spectrum source with a new compact jet of radius ~0.68 pc, apparent velocity ~0.64c, and Doppler factor ~12, while X-ray emission stayed disk-corona dominated.
Spectroscopic and imaging confirmation of the brightest known quadruply-lensed quasar J1330-0905 at z=2.22 with Einstein radius ~0.45 arcsec and predicted magnification ~56.
Discovery of Thunder, a bow-shock PWN powered by PSR J1631-4722 in SNR G336.7+0.5 (Nimbus), characterized with radio, X-ray, and polarization data at assumed 7 kpc distance with age ~30-45 kyr.
A LightGBM classifier trained on NWAY Bayesian matches identifies true Chandra-Gaia counterparts for 113k X-ray sources, flags 7k ambiguous cases, and attributes half of 20k separation-only matches to chance coincidences, validated at 95% on COUP without positional features.
VLBA multi-frequency imaging reveals a relativistic, well-collimated jet of ~745 pc in a z=3.4 super-Eddington radio-loud quasar, distinct from low-redshift analogues.
Low-luminosity AGN exhibit structure function slopes rising from 0.1 to 0.3 with black hole mass, no breaks on decadal scales, amplitude anticorrelated with luminosity and positively correlated with mass.
Multi-phase observations of NGC 1427A indicate tidal torquing from a dwarf fly-by has pre-conditioned its gas for ram-pressure stripping by the Fornax intracluster medium, placing the galaxy at the onset of environmental quenching with a declining star formation rate.
TNG50 MW analogues reproduce global soft X-ray luminosity, inner surface brightness, emission measure and O VII absorption but show too-steep radial decline in X-ray brightness and 65% lower O VIII absorption than observed, indicating overly central feedback.
FRB dispersion measures directly constrain suppression of the matter power spectrum due to feedback at k ~ 0.1-3 h/Mpc, reduce posterior variance by a factor of ~8 at k~1 h/Mpc, and exclude extreme large-scale feedback scenarios at ~2 sigma.
Mid-IR search of NEOWISE yields 10 TDEs above 3e43 erg/s with volumetric rate 1.2e-10 Mpc^-3 yr^-1, showing suppression at high luminosity explained by reduced TDE rate for larger black holes.
A Bayesian framework using simulations corrects Eddington bias in LSXPS, recovering over 500 X-ray transients—an eight-fold increase over prior confirmed samples.
The paper outlines the goals for the SKA-Mid Galactic Plane survey at 10-15 GHz to deliver the first uniform high-resolution view of ionized structures and feedback in the Milky Way.
Rotationally modulated radio pulses with near-100% circular polarization from M dwarf ASKAP J181335-604720 are interpreted as coherent electron cyclotron maser emission from its magnetosphere based on simultaneous radio-optical observations.
HE 1237-2252 exhibits a changing-look event driven by intrinsic accretion-rate variations, revealing a two-component broad-line region consisting of virialized gas at ~27 light-days and disk emission at larger radii.
EP J174942.2-384834 is classified as a very faint X-ray transient black hole candidate based on its hard X-ray spectra, optical/UV brightening correlated with X-rays, and lack of radio emission.
Spectra of the western eROSITA bubbles reveal two uniform components at 0.60 keV and 0.21 keV with sub-solar abundances, plus a geometrical model constraining horizontal size to ~6 kpc but leaving vertical extent uncertain.
PSR J2101-4802 is a transitional millisecond pulsar with a ~1-day orbit, 0.15 solar mass He-WD companion, and large orbital period derivative that links redback-like systems to detached binaries.
AGN feedback simulations predict X-ray surface brightness profiles that match eROSITA CGM observations out to 100 kpc.
Higher Eddington ratio AGN exhibit increased [O III] outflow incidence and reduced obscuration, supporting radiative feedback as the regulator.
A multi-wavelength census of eRASS1 counterparts using ZTF photometry yields 43 refined COB candidates and 4 promising XRBs from radio cross-matches.
HD 251108 is a binary with a 1.3 solar-mass K giant and 0.25 solar-mass M dwarf, featuring a migrating spot that explains 12-year photometric modulation and RV variations from both activity and orbit.
A single galaxy cluster lenses two quasars (one Type I at z=1.524, one dust-obscured Type II at z=1.939) into four images each, yielding a projected mass of ~3.3e14 solar masses within 500 kpc and time delays of hundreds to over 1000 days.
citing papers explorer
No citing papers match the current filters.