The Chandra Multiwavelength Plane (ChaMPlane) Survey aims to constrain the
Galactic population of mainly accretion-powered, but also coronal,
low-luminosity X-ray sources (Lx <~ 1e33 erg/s). To investigate the X-ray
source content in the plane at fluxes Fx >~ 3e-14 erg/s/cm^2, we study 21 of
the brightest ChaMPlane sources, viz. those with >250 net counts (0.3-8 keV).
By excluding the heavily obscured central part of the plane, our
optical/near-infrared follow-up puts useful constraints on their nature. We
have discovered two likely accreting white-dwarf binaries. CXOPS
J154305.5-522709 (CBS 7) is a cataclysmic variable showing periodic X-ray flux
modulations on 1.2 hr and 2.4 hr; given its hard spectrum the system is likely
magnetic. We identify CXOPS J175900.8-334548 (CBS 17) with a late-type giant;
if the X-rays are indeed accretion-powered, it belongs to the small but growing
class of symbiotic binaries lacking strong optical nebular emission lines.
CXOPS J171340.5-395213 (CBS 14) is an X-ray transient that brightened >~100
times. We tentatively classify it as a very late-type (>M7) dwarf, of which few
have been detected in X-rays. The remaining sources are (candidate) active
galaxies, normal stars and active binaries, and a plausible young T Tauri star.
The derived cumulative number density versus flux (log N - log S) relation for
the Galactic sources appears flatter than expected for an isotropic
distribution, indicating that we are seeing a non-local sample of mostly
coronal sources. Our findings define source templates that we can use, in part,
to classify the >1e4 fainter sources in ChaMPlane.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, ApJ in pres