steady state, with balanced load, is all X1, which for a round rotor machine is Xd. For faults, X1 starts off as Xd'', then becomes Xd', and, if the fault lasts long enough, becomes Xd. Salient pole rotors add the complexity of dealing with Xq. X2 (at all times) is approximately equal to Xd''. X0, which really ought be Z0, or even R0, is all most entirely resistive, and is basically just the resistance of the stator. That's why it is so much lower than the other two.
Because of the way the sequence networks parallel, a decent sized generator (say 2MW) in parallel with a comparable utility service produces an SLG fault value much higher than the sum of the two sources taken individually.