- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/aegisx
- Title:
- AEGIS-X Chandra Extended Groth Strip X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- AEGISX
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the X-ray sources detected in the AEGIS-X survey, a series of deep Chandra ACIS-I observations of the Extended Groth Strip (EGS). The survey comprises pointings at eight separate positions, each with nominal exposure of 200 ks, covering a total area of approximately 0.67 deg<sup>2</sup> in a strip of length 2 degrees. In their paper, the authors describe in detail an updated version of the data reduction and point-source-detection algorithms used to analyze these data. A total of 1325 band-merged sources have been found to a Poisson probability limit of 4 x 10<sup>-6</sup>, with limiting fluxes of 5.3 x 10<sup>-17</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the soft (0.5 - 2 keV) band and 3.8 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the hard (2 - 10 keV) band. They present simulations verifying the validity of their source-detection procedure and showing a very small, <1.5%, contamination rate from spurious sources. Optical/NIR counterparts have been identified from the DEEP2, CFHTLS, and Spitzer/Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) surveys of the same region. Using a likelihood ratio method, they find optical counterparts for 76% of their sources, complete to R<sub>AB</sub> = 24.1, and, of the 66% of the sources that have IRAC coverage, 94% have a counterpart to a limit of 0.9 uJy at 3.6 um (m<sub>AB</sub> = 23.8). After accounting for (small) positional offsets in the eight Chandra fields, the astrometric accuracy of Chandra positions is found to be 0.8 arcseconds rms; however, this number depends both on the off-axis angle and the number of detected counts for a given source. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2009 based on the electronic versions of Tables 9, 10 and 11 from the paper which were obtained from the Astrophysical Journal web site. It is also available from the CDS at <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/ApJS/180/102">https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/ApJS/180/102</a>. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/aegisxdcxo
- Title:
- AEGIS-X Deep Survey Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- AEGISXDCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table is based on the results of deep Chandra imaging of the central region of the Extended Groth Strip, the AEGIS-X Deep (AEGIS-XD) survey. When combined with previous Chandra observations of a wider area of the strip, AEGIS-X Wide (AEGIS-XW), these provide data to a nominal exposure depth of 800ks in the three central ACIS-I fields, a region of approximately 0.29 deg<sup>2</sup>. This is currently the third deepest X-ray survey in existence; a factor ~2-3 shallower than the Chandra Deep Fields (CDFs), but over an area ~3 times greater than each CDF. This table contains a catalog of 937 point sources detected in the deep Chandra observations, along with identifications of the X-ray sources from deep ground-based, Spitzer, GALEX, and Hubble Space Telescope imaging. Using a likelihood ratio analysis, the authors associate multiband counterparts for 929/937 of their X-ray sources, with an estimated 95% reliability,making the identification completeness approximately 94% in a statistical sense. Reliable spectroscopic redshifts for 353 of the X-ray sources are available predominantly from Keck (DEEP2/3) and MMT Hectospec, so the current spectroscopic completeness is ~38%. For the remainder of the X-ray sources, the authors compute photometric redshifts based on multiband photometry in up to 35 bands from the UV to mid-IR. Particular attention is given to the fact that the vast majority of the X-ray sources are active galactic nuclei and require hybrid templates. The photometric redshifts have a mean accuracy sigma = 0.04 and an outlier fraction of approximately 5%, reaching sigma = 0.03 with less than 4% outliers in the area covered by CANDELS. The new AEGIS-XD Chandra data were taken at three nominal pointing positions, which the authors have designated AEGIS-1, AEGIS-2, and AEGIS-3. These observations were all taken in the time period 2007 December 11 to 2009 June 26 using the ACIS-I instrument. The centers of the 3 AEGIS fields correspond fairly closely to those of the EGS-3, EGS-4, and EGS-5 fields of Laird et al. (2009, ApJS, 180, 102). The Rainbow Cosmological Surveys Database (<a href="http://rainbowx.fis.ucm.es/Rainbow_Database/Home.html">http://rainbowx.fis.ucm.es/Rainbow_Database/Home.html</a>; see Section 4 of the reference paper for more details) contains many multiwavelength photometric datasets giving information on optical and infrared sources in these fields. The characteristics of these datasets are given in Table 7 of the reference paper. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2016 based on the CDS catalog J/ApJS/220/10 files table11.dat, table12.dat, table13.dat, table14.dat and table15.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/aknepdfcxo
- Title:
- Akari North Ecliptic Pole Deep Field Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- AKNEPDFCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains results from the 300-ks Chandra survey in the AKARI North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) deep field. This field has a unique set of 9-band infrared photometry covering 2-24 micron from the AKARI Infrared Camera, including mid-infrared (MIR) bands not covered by Spitzer. The survey is one of the deepest ever achieved at ~15 micron, and is by far the widest among those with similar depths in the MIR. This makes this field unique for the MIR-selection of AGN at z ~1. The authors have designed a source detection procedure, which performs joint Maximum Likelihood PSF fits on all of their 15 mosaicked Chandra pointings covering an area of 0.34 square degrees. The procedure has been highly optimized and tested by simulations. A point source catalog with photometry and Bayesian-based 90%-confidence upper limits in the 0.5-7, 0.5-2, 2-7, 2-4, and 4-7 keV bands has been produced. The catalog contains 457 X-ray sources and the spurious fraction is estimated to be ~1.7%. Sensitivity and 90%-confidence upper flux limits maps in all bands are provided as well. In their study, the authors searched for optical MIR counterparts in the central 0.25 square degrees, where deep Subaru Suprime-Cam multi-band images exist. Among the 377 X-ray sources detected therein, ~80% have optical counterparts and ~60% also have AKARI mid-IR counterparts. The authors cross-matched their X-ray sources with MIR-selected AGN from Hanami et al. (2012, PASJ, 64, 70). Around 30% of all AGN that have MID-IR SEDs purely explainable by AGN activity are strong Compton-thick AGN candidates. The source catalog contained in this table uses an internal threshold of ML = 9.5 which corresponds to ML<sub>empir</sub> ~12 (see Sect. 4.3.3 of the reference paper for more details). In total, 457 sources are detected, of which 377 objects fall in the deep Subaru imaging region (shown in Figure 1 of the reference paper). This catalog is designed to identify X-ray emitting objects in the Chandra/AKARI NEP deep field. Together with the optimized cross-identification procedure, the clear advantage of the catalog is the very high reliability, while the catalog sacrifices completeness for objects with low counts (see Figure 9 in the paper). Only ~1.7% of the objects listed in the source catalog are expected to be spurious source detections. The two sources that have an ML-threshold in the 0.5-7 keV band below 9.5 originate from a 0.5-7 keV single-band source detection run. To quote similar ML values for all objects, the authors list the total 0.5-7 keV ML values from the joint 3-energy band source detection run. The listed counts, count rates, fluxes, and the corresponding uncertainties in the 0.5-7 keV band are taken from the single-band detection run. Considering the uncertainty in the astrometric calibration, all sources should be considered as possible X-ray counterparts that are within a radius of r<sub>match</sub> = sqrt(sigma<sub>total</sub><sup>2</sup>+sigma<sub>astro</sub><sup>2</sup>), with sigma<sub>total</sub> = 5 * sqrt(sigma<sub>sys</sub><sup>2</sup>+sigma<sub>stat</sub><sup>2</sup>) and sigma<sub>sys</sub> = 0.1 arcseconds and sigma<sub>astro</sub> = 0.2 arcseconds (astrometric uncertainty). The authors also created a low-probability source catalog (not contained in this present HEASARC table): they caution that, due to the significant number of spurious sources in the low-probability catalog, it should NOT be used to select X-ray sources or to increase the sample size of X-ray-selected objects. It can be of interest if the scientific goal requires one to EXCLUDE potential X-ray emitting objects from a sample with a high completeness, since, using this strategy, one accepts those objects that are excluded are not associated with an X-ray-emitting object. The low-probability source catalog (available at <a href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/ftp/cats/J_MNRAS/446/911/">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/ftp/cats/J_MNRAS/446/911/</a> as the files lowpscat.dat.gz and lowpscat.fits) has a lower maximum likelihood threshold than the main source catalog (an internal threshold of ML = 5, corresponding to ML<sub>empir</sub> ~9.5). This catalog contains 626 detected sources, of which 506 are located within the deep Subaru imaging region. Based on their simulated data, the authors conclude that 19% of all the low-probability source catalog entries are false detections. Considering only the deep Subaru imaging area the spurious source fraction drops to 15%. When using information from this catalog, please cite the reference paper: Krumpe et al. (2015, MNRAS, 446, 911). This table was created by the HEASARC in August 2015 based on CDS table J/MNRAS/446/911 files mainscat.dat, the main source catalog. Some of the values for the name parameter in the HEASARC's implementation of this table were corrected in April 2018. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/arcquincxo
- Title:
- Arches and Quintuplet Clusters Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ARCQUINCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Galactic centre (GC) provides a unique laboratory for a detailed examination of the interplay between massive star formation and the nuclear environment of our Galaxy. Here are presented some of the results from a 100-ks Chandra Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS) observation of the Arches and Quintuplet star clusters in the form of a catalog of 244 point-like X-ray sources detected in the observation. The deep Chandra ACIS-I observation (Obs. ID: 4500) was carried out on 2004 June 9. The Arches cluster was placed about 1-arcmin away from the aim point to minimize the effect of the CCD gaps on mapping the extended X-ray emission around the cluster. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2007 based on CDS Catalog J/MNRAS/371/38 file table1.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/acceptcat
- Title:
- Archive of Chandra Cluster Entropy Profile Tables (ACCEPT) Catalog
- Short Name:
- ACCEPTCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table, the Archive of Chandra Cluster Entropy Profile Tables (ACCEPT) Catalog, contains the radial entropy profiles of the intracluster medium (ICM) for a collection of 239 clusters taken from the Chandra X-ray Observatory's Data Archive. Entropy is of great interest because it controls ICM global properties and records the thermal history of a cluster. The authors find that most ICM entropy profiles are well fitted by a model which is a power law at large radii and approaches a constant value at small radii: K(r) = K<sub>0</sub> + K<sub>100</sub> (r/100 kpc)<sup>alpha</sup>, where K<sub>0</sub> quantifies the typical excess of core entropy above the best-fitting power law found at larger radii. The authors also show that the K<sub>0</sub> distributions of both the full archival sample and the primary Highest X-Ray Flux Galaxy Cluster Sample of Reiprich (2001, Ph.D. thesis) are bimodal with a distinct gap between K<sub>0</sub> ~ 30 - 50 keV cm<sup>2</sup> and population peaks at K<sub>0</sub> ~ 15 keV cm<sup>2</sup> and K<sub>0</sub> ~ 150 keV cm<sup>2</sup>. The effects of point-spread function smearing and angular resolution on best-fit K<sub>0</sub> values are investigated using mock Chandra observations and degraded entropy profiles, respectively. The authors find that neither of these effects is sufficient to explain the entropy-profile flattening they measure at small radii. The influence of profile curvature and the number of radial bins on the best-fit K<sub>0</sub> is also considered, and they find no indication that K<sub>0</sub> is significantly impacted by either. All data and results associated with this work are publicly available via the project web site <a href="http://www.pa.msu.edu/astro/MC2/accept/">http://www.pa.msu.edu/astro/MC2/accept/</a>. The sample is collected from observations taken with the Chandra X-ray Observatory and which were publicly available in the CDA (Chandra Data Archive) as of 2008 August. This table was created by the HEASARC in January 2012 based on CDS Catalog J/ApJS/182/12 files table1.dat and table5.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/bmwchancat
- Title:
- Brera Multi-scale Wavelet Chandra Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- BMWCHANCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the BMW-Chandra source catalog drawn from essentially all Chandra ACIS-I pointed observations with an exposure time in excess of 10 ks that were public as of March 2003 (136 observations). Using the wavelet detection algorithm developed by Lazzati et al. (1999ApJ...524..414) and Campana et al. (1999ApJ...524..423C), which can characterize both point-like and extended sources, the authors identified 21325 sources. Among them, 16758 are serendipitous, i.e. not associated with the targets of the pointings, and do not require a non-automated analysis. This makes this catalog the largest compilation of Chandra sources as of the date of publication of this catalog (August 2008). The 0.5 - 10 keV absorption corrected fluxes of these sources range from ~3 x 10<sup>-16</sup> to 9 x 10<sup>-12</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s with a median of 7 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s. The catalog consists of count rates and relative errors in three energy bands (total, 0.5 - 7 keV; soft, 0.5 - 2 keV; and hard, 2 - 7 keV), and source positions relative to the highest signal-to-noise detection among the three bands. The wavelet algorithm also provides an estimate of the extension of the source. The authors include information drawn from the headers of the original files, as well, and extracted source counts in four additional energy bands, SB1 (0.5 - 1 keV), SB2 (1 - 2 keV), HB1 (2 - 4 keV), and HB2 (4 - 7 keV). They computed the sky coverage for the full catalog and for a subset at high Galactic latitude (|b| > 20 degrees). The complete catalog provides a sky coverage in the soft band (0.5 - 2 keV, S/N = 3) of ~8 deg<sup>2</sup> at a limiting flux of 10<sup>-13</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s, and ~2 deg<sup>2</sup> at a limiting flux of ~10<sup>-15</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s. The total numbers of matches with the FIRST, IRASPSC, 2MASS, and GSC2 catalogs obtained after a closest-distance selection are 13, 87, 6700, and 4485, respectively. This table was created by the HEASARC in September 2008 based on the CDS table J/A+A/488/1221 file catalog.dat. The catalog version is BMC 1.0.1F. All sources in this version of the catalog were from observations in POINTING and TIMED ACIS read modes. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cyder
- Title:
- Calan-Yale Deep Extragalactic Research Survey X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CYDER
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The main goal of the Calan-Yale Deep Extragalactic Research (CYDER) Survey X-ray survey is to study serendipitous X-ray sources detected by Chandra in an intermediate flux range (10<sup>-15</sup> to 10<sup>-12</sup> ergs/s) that comprises most of the X-ray background. A total of 267 X-ray sources spread over five archived fields were detected. The log N - log S distribution obtained for this sample is consistent with the results of other surveys. Deep V and I images were taken of these fields in order to calculate X-ray-to-optical flux ratios. Identifications and redshifts were obtained for 106 sources using optical spectroscopy from 8 m class telescopes to reach the optically faintest sources, to the same level as deeper X-ray fields like the Chandra Deep Fields, showing that the nature of sources detected depends mostly on the optical limit for spectroscopy. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2007 based on the CDS table J/ApJ/621/104, file table4.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/candelscxo
- Title:
- CANDELS H-Band Selected Chandra Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CANDELSCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- Improving the capabilities of detecting faint X-ray sources is fundamental to increase the statistics on faint high-z AGN and star-forming galaxies. The authors performed a simultaneous maximum likelihood point-spread function (PSF) fit in the 0.5-2 keV and 2-7 keV energy bands of the 4 Ms Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS) data at the position of the 34,930 CANDELS H-band selected galaxies. For each detected source, they provide X-ray photometry and optical counterpart validation. The authors validated this technique by means of a ray-tracing simulation, and detected a total of 698 X-ray point-sources with a likelihood L > 4.98 (i.e.> 2.7sigma). They show that the prior knowledge of a deep sample of Optical-NIR galaxies leads to a significant increase of the detection of faint (i.e. ~ 10<sup>-17</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup> in the 0.5-2 keV band) sources with respect to "blind" X-ray detections. By including previous catalogs, this work increases the total number of X-ray sources detected in the 4 Ms CDFS, CANDELS area to 793, which represents the largest sample of extremely faint X-ray sources assembled to date. These results suggest that a large fraction of the optical counterparts of our X-ray sources determined by likelihood ratio actually coincides with the priors used for the source detection. Most of the newly detected sources are likely star-forming galaxies or faint absorbed AGN. The authors identified a few sources with putative photometric redshift z > 4. Despite the low number statistics, this sample significantly increases the number of X-ray selected candidate high-z AGN. The 4-Ms CDFS consists of 23 observations described in Table 1 of Luo et al. (2008, ApJS, 179, 19) plus 31 other pointings described in Xue et al. (2011, ApJS, 195, 10, hereafter X11) for a total exposure of ~4 Ms. For the purpose of this paper, the authors employed only observations taken with a focal temperature of <= -120 C, since at higher temperatures the background cannot be modeled with their technique. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2016 based on <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJ/823/95">CDS Catalog J/ApJ/823/95</a> file catalog.dat. Some of the values for the name parameter in the HEASARC's implementation of this table were corrected in April 2018. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/carinacxo
- Title:
- Carina Nebula Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CARINACXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This database table contains a catalog of >~ 14,000 X-ray sources observed by the ACIS instrument on the Chandra X-ray Observatory within a 1.42 deg<sup>2</sup> survey of the Great Nebula in Carina, known as the Chandra Carina Complex Project (CCCP). The study from which this table is taken appeared in a special ApJS issue which was devoted to the CCCP. In it, the authors described the data reduction and analysis procedures performed on the X-ray observations, including calibration and cleaning of the X-ray event data, point-source detection, and source extraction. The catalog appears to be complete across most of the field to an absorption-corrected total-band luminosity of ~ 10<sup>30.7</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup> for a typical low-mass pre-main-sequence star. Counterparts to the X-ray sources were identified in a variety of visual, near-infrared, and mid-infrared surveys. The X-ray and infrared source properties presented herein form the basis of many CCCP studies of the young stellar populations in Carina. The prefixes 'fb', 'sb' and 'hb' on the names of photometric quantities designate the full or total (0.5-8 keV), soft (0.5-2 keV), and hard (2-8 keV) energy bands. Source significance quantities (fb_prob_no_src, sb_prob_no_src, hb_prob_no_src, prob_no_src_min) were computed using a subset of each source's extractions chosen to maximize significance (Broos et al. 2010, ApJ, 714, 1582, hereafter B10, Section 6.2). X-ray source position quantities (RA, Dec, error_radius) were computed using a subset of each source's extractions chosen to minimize the position uncertainty (B10, Sections 6.2 and 7.1). All other quantities were computed using a subset of each source's extractions chosen to balance the conflicting goals of minimizing photometric uncertainty and of avoiding photometric bias (B10, Sections 6.2 and 7). A summary of the counterpart catalogs that were correlated with the Chandra Carina sources is given in Table 5 of the reference paper and is listed below: <pre> Catalog Scope Reference Skiff Visual spectral types Skiff (2009, VizieR Online Data Catalog, 1, 2023) KR Visual photometry Kharchenko & Roeser (2009, VizieR Online Data Catalog, 1280, 0) PPMXL CCD proper motions (PMs) Roeser et al. (2010, AJ, 139, 2440) UCAC3 CCD PMs Zacharias et al. (2004, AJ, 127, 3043) BSS Bright star PMs Urban et al. (2004, VizieR Online Data Catalog, 1294, 0) CMD Photographic PMs, Tr 14, Tr 16, Cr 232 Cudworth et al. (1993, AJ, 105, 1822) DETWC Visual photometry, Tr 14 & 16 DeGioia-Eastwood et al. (2001, ApJ, 549, 578) MDW Visual spectral types, Cr 228 Massey et al. (2001, AJ, 121, 1050) MJ Visual photometry, Tr 14 & 16 Massey & Johnson (1993, AJ, 105, 980) CP High-mass photometry, Cr 228 Carraro & Patat (2001, A&A, 379, 136) DAY Low-mass photometry, Cr 228 Delgado et al. (2007, A&A, 467, 1397) HAWK-I Deep near-infrared photometry Preibisch et al. (2011, ApJS, 194, 10, CCCP HAWK-I Paper) 2MASS Shallow near-infrared photometry Skrutskie et al. (2006, AJ, 131, 1163) SOFI Deep near-infrared photometry, Tr 14 Ascenso et al. (2007, A&A, 476, 199) NACO Deep near-infrared photometry, Tr 14 Ascenso et al. (2007, A&A, 476, 199) Sana Deep near-infrared photometry, Tr 14 Sana et al. (2010, A&A, 515, A26) SpVela Mid-infrared photometry (Spitzer) Povich et al. (2011, ApJS, 194, 14, CCCP IR YSOs Paper) SpSmith Mid-infrared photometry (Spitzer) Smith et al. (2010, MNRAS, 406, 952) AC ACIS observation of Tr 16 Albacete-Colombo et al. (2008, A&A, 490, 1055) </pre> This table was created by the HEASARC in May 2011 based on the electronic versions of Tables 2 and 6 from the reference paper which were obtained from the ApJS web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/carinaclas
- Title:
- Carina Nebula Chandra X-Ray Point Source Classes
- Short Name:
- CARINACLAS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra Carina Complex Project (CCCP) provides a sensitive X-ray survey of a nearby starburst region over > 1 deg<sup>2</sup> in extent. Thousands of faint X-ray sources are found, many concentrated into rich young stellar clusters. However, significant contamination from unrelated Galactic and extragalactic sources is present in the X-ray catalog. In their paper, the authors describe the use of a naive Bayes classifier to assign membership probabilities to individual sources, based on source location, X-ray properties, and visual/infrared properties. For the particular membership decision rule adopted, 75% of CCCP sources are classified as members, 11% are classified as contaminants, and 14% remain unclassified. The resulting sample of stars likely to be Carina members is used in several other studies, which appear in the special issue of Astrophysical Journal Supplement (Volume 194, May 2011 Issue) which was devoted to the CCCP. This table was created by the HEASARC in June 2011 based on the electronic version of Table 5 from the reference paper which was obtained from the ApJS web site. In the input source table, the names were truncated by 3 characters from their complete version. The HEASARC corrected these names, and also obtained the Chandra source positions, using the electronic version of Table 2 from the companion paper (Broos et al. 2011, ApJS, 194, 2: available as the HEASARC Browse table CARINACXO), also obtained from the ApJS web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cargm31cxo
- Title:
- Carina Nebula Gum 31 Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CARGM31CXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- Gum 31 is a prominent, but still rather poorly studied, HII region around the stellar cluster NGC 3324 at the northwestern periphery of the Carina nebula complex. The aim of the authors aim was to reveal and characterize the young stellar population in Gum 31. An X-ray survey is the only efficient way to identify young stars in this region, which has extremely high galactic field-star contamination, that can avoid the strong biases of infrared-excess-selected samples of disk-bearing young stars. The authors used the Chandra observatory to perform a deep (70 ks) X-ray observation of the Gum 31 region and detected 679 X-ray point sources. This extends and complements the X-ray survey of the central Carina nebula regions performed in the Chandra Carina Complex Project (CCCP, available in the HEASARC database system as the CARINACXO table). Using deep near-infrared images from their recent VISTA survey of the Carina nebula complex, their comprehensive Spitzer point-source catalog, and optical archive data, the authors identify counterparts for 75% of these X-ray sources. The aimpoint of the ACIS-I observation was set to be RA(J2000) = 10<sup>h</sup> 37<sup>m</sup> 36.6<sup>s</sup>, Dec(J2000) = -58<sup>o</sup> 41' 18". This position is close to the center of the H II region, and allows both the stellar cluster NGC 3324 and the cluster G286.38-0.26 to be in the inner parts of the field-of-view, where the point-spread function is still very good. The pointing roll angle (i.e., the orientation of the detector with respect to the celestial north direction) was 138.35<sup>o</sup>. The ACIS field-of-view is just wide enough to cover the full spatial extent of the optically bright Gum 31 H II region and some parts of the surrounding dust shell (see Fig. 1 of the reference paper). The ACIS-I field of view is 17' x 17', which corresponds to 11.3 p x 11.3 pc at the Gum 31 distance of 2.3 kpc). The total net exposure time of the observation was 68,909s (19.14 h). The details of the source detection procedures are described in Section 21. of the reference paper. The final X-ray catalog contains 679 individual point sources. The number of extracted counts ranges from 3 for the faintest sources, up to 920 for the strongest source, while the median value is 11 counts. This table contains the basic X-ray properties and near- and mid-infrared photometry of the X-ray sources detected in the Gum 31 field. The details of the IR matching to the X-ray sources are given in Sections 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3 of the reference paper. This table was created by the HEASARC in May 2014 based on <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/A+A/564/A120">CDS Catalog J/A+A/564/A120</a> files table1.dat and table3.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cenacxo
- Title:
- Centaurus A Galaxy Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CENACXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the results from two Chandra X-ray Observatory observations of the X-ray point source population in the nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128). Using a wavelet decomposition detection algorithm, 246 individual point sources are detected above a limiting luminosity of ~ 2 * 10^36 ergs/s, 82 of which are detected in both data sets where the fields of view overlap. Thirty-eight sources were detected in only one observation but were within the field of view of both pointings, implying considerable variability. Eight foreground stars were identified in these observations, and nine of the sources were identified with known globular clusters in Centaurus A. All previously observed ROSAT sources within our field of view were detected. The faintest source in this table has 5 counts, which corresponds to a limiting luminosity of ~2.2 x 10^36 erg/s at the center of the field of view. The two observations of Cen A were made with the ACIS-I array (observation IDs were 00316 and 00962) on 1999 December 5 and 2000 May 17, with 35.9 36.5 ks exposures, respectively. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2007 based on CDS table J/ApJ/560/675 file table2.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cepbob3oid
- Title:
- Cep B/OB3 Star-Forming Region Chandra Point Source Optical/IR IDs Catalog
- Short Name:
- CEPBOB3OID
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Cepheus B (Cep B) molecular cloud and a portion of the nearby Cep OB3b OB association, one of the most active regions of star formation within 1 kpc, have been observed with the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) detector on board the Spitzer Space Telescope. The goals were to study protoplanetary disk evolution and processes of sequential triggered star formation in the region. Out of ~400 pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars selected with an earlier Chandra X-ray Observatory observation, ~95% are identified with mid-infrared sources and most of these are classified as diskless or disk-bearing stars. The discovery of the additional >200 IR-excess low-mass members gives a combined Chandra+Spitzer PMS sample that is almost complete down to 0.5 * M<sub>sun</sub> outside of the cloud, and somewhat above 1 * M<sub>sun</sub> in the cloud. The X-ray observations of the Cep B/Cep OB3b region and their data analysis are described in detail by Getman et al. (2006, CDS Cat. J/ApJS/163/306, HEASARC CEPBOB3CXO table). The 30 ks exposure was obtained on 2003 March 11.51-11.88 with the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS) detector on board the Chandra X-ray Observatory as part of the ACIS Instrument Team's Guaranteed Time Observations (ObsId No. 3502, P.I.: G. Garmire). The mid-IR observation of Cep B and Cep OB3b was obtained on 2007 February 18 with the IRAC detector on the Spitzer Space Telescope in the 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 micron channels. This was a General Observer project (program identification No. 30361; P.I.: J. Wang). This table contains the optical and infrared counterpart information on the 431 X-ray sources detected by Chandra. It does not contain the 224 IR-excess objects which were not detected as X-ray sources (listed in Table 3 of the reference paper) that are thought to be additional low-mass members of this complex. This table was created by the HEASARC in August 2011 primarily based on CDS catalog J/ApJ/699/1454 files table.dat and table 2.dat which list the optical and infrared counterpart information on the 431 X-ray sources detected by Chandra. The names and positions of these X-ray sources were taken from the Getman et al. (2006, ApJS, 163, 306) Catalog, which is available as the HEASARC Browse table CEPBOB3CXO. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cepbob3cxo
- Title:
- Cep B/OB3 Star-Forming Region Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CEPBOB3CXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Cepheus B star formation region (the Cep B molecular cloud and the Cep OB3b OB association) Chandra X-Ray point source catalog. The Cepheus B (Cep B) molecular cloud and a portion of the nearby Cep OB3b OB association, one of the most active regions of star formation within 1 kpc, have been observed with the ACIS detector on board the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. 431 X-ray sources have been detected, of which 89% are confidently identified as clustered pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars. Two main results are obtained. First, the best census to date for the stellar population of the region has been made, with many members of two rich stellar clusters, the lightly obscured Cep OB3b association and the deeply embedded cluster in Cep B, whose existence was previously traced only by a handful of radio sources and T Tauri stars, being identified. Second, a discrepancy between the X-ray luminosity functions of the Cep OB3b and the Orion Nebula cluster has been found. This may be due to the different initial mass functions of the two regions (an excess of ~=0.3 M_solar stars) or different age distributions. Several other results are obtained. A diffuse X-ray component seen in the field is attributed to the integrated emission of unresolved low-mass PMS stars. The X-ray emission from HD 217086 (O7n), the principle ionizing source of the region, follows the standard model, involving many small shocks in an unmagnetized radiatively accelerated wind. X-ray source 294 joins a number of similar superflare PMS stars for which long magnetic structures may connect the protoplanetary disk to the stellar surface. The Chandra observation of Cep B and Cep OB3b was obtained on 2003 March 11.51-11.88 with the ACIS camera. Only results from the imaging array (ACIS-I) covering about 17' x 17' on the sky are considered here. The aim point of the array was 22 56 49.4 +62 39 55.6 (J2000.0 RA and Dec), and the satellite roll angle was 7.9 degrees. The total net exposure time was 30 ksec, with no background flaring or data losses. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2007 based on the merger of electronic versions of tables 1, 2 and 3 from the above reference which were obtained from the ApJS website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cg12cxo
- Title:
- CG 12 Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CG12CXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The mysterious high Galactic latitude cometary globule CG 12 has been observed with the ACIS detector on board the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. 128 X-ray sources are detected, of which half are likely young stars formed within the globule's head. This new population of >~ 50 T Tauri stars and one new embedded protostar is far larger than the previously reported few intermediate-mass and two protostellar members of the cloud. Most of the newly discovered stars have masses of 0.2-0.7 M<sub>solar</sub>, and 9% - 15% have K-band excesses from inner protoplanetary disks. X-ray properties provide an independent distance estimate consistent with the unusual location of CG 12 >~200 pc above the Galactic plane. The star formation efficiency in CG 12 appears to be 15% - 35%, far above that seen in other triggered molecular globules. The median photometric age found for the T Tauri population, assuming Siess et al. (2000, A&A, 358, 593) isochrones, is ~4 Myr with a large spread of <1 - 20 Myr and ongoing star formation in the molecular cores. The stellar age and spatial distributions are inconsistent with a simple radiation-driven implosion (RDI) model and suggest either that CG 12 is an atypically large shocked globule or that it has been subject to several distinct episodes of triggering and ablation. In their paper the authors report a previously unnoticed group of B-type stars northwest of CG 12 that may be the remnants of an OB association that produced multiple supernova explosions that could have shocked and ablated the cloud over a 15 - 30 Myr period. HD 120958 (B3e), the most luminous member of the group, may be currently driving an RDI shock into the CG 12 cloud. The current project combines four X-ray observations of the globule: <pre> Field ObsID Start Time Expo. R.A. Decl. Roll Angle (UT) (ks) (J2000.0) (deg) I.... 6423 2006 Apr 15 16:19:17 30.8 13 57 44.52 39 58 48.31 11.5 II... 6424 2006 Jun 02 07:25:09 3.1 13 57 42.87 39 43 01.76 285.0 III.. 6425 2006 Apr 13 08:44:08 3.1 13 56 19.40 39 42 47.94 14.7 IV... 6426 2006 Apr 15 12:54:20 3.1 13 56 19.40 39 58 48.09 11.1 </pre> where the units of right ascension are hours, minutes, and seconds, and the units of declination are degrees, arcminutes, and arcseconds, ObsID values are from the Chandra Observation Catalog, exposure times are the sum of Good Time Intervals (GTIs) for the CCD at the telescope aim point (CCD3) minus 1.3% to account for CCD readouts, and the aim points and roll angles are obtained from the satellite aspect solution before astrometric correction was applied. There is one primary field (I in Fig. 1 of the reference paper) with ~31 ks exposure directed at the globule's core and three secondary fields (II, III, and IV in Fig. 1) with ~3 ks exposures positioned contiguously to the north and west of the core. The primary pointing is intended to detect the population of pre-main sequence (PMS) stars forming in the molecular head of the globule. The secondary pointings are designed to locate an older population of stars expected if the present cloud is only the ablated remnant of a larger cloud that experienced sequential star formation triggering events, similar to the sequence of stars found in the authors' Chandra study of IC 1396N (Getman et al. 2007, ApJ, 654, 316, available in Browse as the IC1396NCXO table). Source searching was performed with data images and exposure maps constructed at three spatial resolutions (0.5", 1.0", and 1.4" pixel<sup>-1</sup>) using the CIAO wavdetect tool. The authors ran wavdetect with a low threshold P = 10<sup>-5</sup>, which is highly sensitive but permits false detections at this point in the analysis. This was followed by visual examination to locate other candidate sources, mainly close doubles and candidate sources near the detection threshold. Using ACIS Extract, photons were extracted within polygonal contours of ~90% encircled energy using position-dependent models of the PSF. The background was measured locally in source-free regions. Due to the very low, spatially invariant ACIS-I background in the Chandra observations of CG 12, there is a one-to-one correspondence between a source's significance and net counts. Following the procedure of Getman et al. (2007, ApJ, 654, 316), the list of candidate sources ws trimmed to omit sources with fewer than ~5 estimated source net counts, net full-band counts/PSF fraction <~ 4.5. In the case of the CG 12 observations, the above criterion is equivalent to accepting sources with a source significance of >~ 1.1. Thus, most of the statistically insignificant source candidates found during the wavdetect step were eliminated by the application of these source existence criteria. For Chandra sources with > 20 net counts, the authors performed spectral analysis with the XSPEC spectral fitting package version 12.2. The unbinned source and background spectra were fitted with one-temperature APEC plasma emission models using the maximum likelihood method. They assumed 0.3 times solar elemental abundances previously suggested as typical for young stellar objects (YSOs) in other star-forming regions. Solar abundances were taken from Anders & Grevesse (1989, Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 53, 197). X-ray absorption was modeled using the atomic cross sections of Morrison & McCammon (1983, ApJ, 270, 119). For absorbed thermal spectra characteristics of PMS stars, the absorption N<sub>H</sub> can be estimated to roughly a factor of 2 precision for 20 count sources. This table was created by the HEASARC in October 2010 based on the electronic versions of Tables 2, 3 and 4 from the paper which were obtained from the CDS (their catalog J/ApJ/673/331). This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chainthcxo
- Title:
- Chamaeleon I North Cloud Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHAINTHCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Chamaeleon (Cha) I North Cloud Chandra X-Ray point source catalog. Sensitive X-ray imaging surveys provide a new and effective tool to establish the census of pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars in nearby young stellar clusters. A deep Chandra X-Ray Observatory (CXO) observation of PMS stars in the Chamaeleon I North cloud achieved a limiting total-band X-ray luminosity of log L<sub>t</sub> ~ 10<sup>27</sup> ergs/s (0.5 - 8 keV band) in a 0.8 x 0.8 pc<sup>2</sup> region. Of the 107 X-ray sources, 37 are associated with Galactic stars, of which 27 are previously recognized cloud members. These include 3 PMS brown dwarfs: the protostellar brown dwarf ISO 192 has a particularly high level of magnetic activity. Follow-up optical photometry and spectroscopy establish that 9-10 of the Chandra sources are probably magnetically active background stars. No new X-ray-discovered stars were confidently found despite the high sensitivity of the Chandra observation. From these findings, the authors argue that the sample of 27 PMS cloud members in the Chandra field is uncontaminated and complete down to K = 12 or a stellar mass of about 0.1 solar masses. A 16'x 16' region of the Cha I North cloud was observed with the imaging array of the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS-I) detector on board the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. The observation took place on 2001 July 2.25-3.04 UT with the detector aimpoint set at 11 10 00.0, -76 35 00 (J2000.0 RA and Declination). The effective exposure was 66.3 ksec. The authors also obtained VI-band CCD images of most of the ACIS field with the 1m telescope and CCD detector at the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) during 2002 February. This table was created by the HEASARC in February 2007 based on CDS catalog J/ApJ/614/267 files table1.dat, table2.dat and table3.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/champhxagn
- Title:
- CHAMP (Chandra Multiwavelength Project) Hard X-Ray Emitting AGN
- Short Name:
- CHAMPHXAGN
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the results from an X-ray and optical analysis of 188 active galactic nuclei (AGN) identified from 497 hard X-ray (observed flux in the (2.0 - 8.0 keV) band > 2.7 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s) sources in 20 Chandra fields (1.5 square degrees) forming part of the Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP). These medium-depth X-ray observations enable the detection of a representative subset of those sources responsible for the bulk of the 2 - 8 keV cosmic X-ray background. Brighter than the survey's optical spectroscopic limit, the authors achieve a reasonable degree of completeness (77% of X-ray sources with counterparts r' < 22.5 have been classified): broad emission-line AGNs (62%), narrow emission-line galaxies (24%), absorption-line galaxies (7%), stars (5%), or clusters (2%). To construct a pure AGN sample, the authors required the rest-frame 2.0-8.0 keV luminosity (uncorrected for intrinsic absorption) to exceed 10<sup>42</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>, thereby excluding any sources that may contain a significant stellar or hot ISM component. The most luminous known star-forming or elliptical galaxies attain at most L<sub>X</sub> = 10<sup>42</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>. Since many of the traditional optical AGN signatures are not present in obscured sources, high X-ray luminosity becomes the authors' single discriminant for supermassive black hole accretion. They believe that almost all of the NELGs and ALGs harbor accreting SMBHs based on their X-ray luminosity. They find that 90% of the identified ChaMP sources have luminosities above this threshold. These selection criteria yield a sample of 188 AGNs from 20 Chandra fields with f(2-8 keV) > 2.7 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>, r' < 22.5, and L<sub>X</sub> > 10<sup>42</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>. The authors removed five objects identified as clusters based on their extended X-ray emission. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2007 based on the CDS table J/ApJ/618/123, file table4.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chesscat
- Title:
- ChaMP Extended Stellar Survey (ChESS) X-Ray Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHESSCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The ChaMP Extended Stellar Survey (ChESS) X-ray catalog contains 348 X-ray-emitting stars identified from correlating the Extended Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP), a wide-area serendipitous survey based on archival X-ray images, with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The authors used morphological star/galaxy separation, matching to an SDSS quasar catalog, an optical color-magnitude cut, and X-ray data-quality tests to create this catalog, from a sample of 2121 matched ChaMP/SDSS sources. Their cuts retain 92% of the spectroscopically confirmed stars in the original sample while excluding 99.6% of the 684 spectroscopically confirmed extragalactic sources. Fewer than 3% of the sources in their final catalog are previously identified stellar X-ray emitters. For 42 catalog members, spectroscopic classifications are available in the literature. New spectral classifications and H-alpha measurements are presented for an additional 79 stars. The catalog is dominated by main-sequence stars; the authors estimate the fraction of giants in ChESS to be ~10%. They identify seven giant stars (including a possible Cepheid and an RR Lyrae star) as ChaMP sources, as well as three cataclysmic variables. They derive distances from ~10 to 2000 pc for the stars in the catalog using photometric parallax relations appropriate for dwarfs on the main sequence and calculate their X-ray and bolometric luminosities. These stars lie in a unique space in the L<sub>X</sub>-distance plane, filling the gap between the nearby stars identified as counterparts to sources in the ROSAT All Sky Survey and the more distant stars detected in deep Chandra and XMM-Newton surveys. For 36 newly identified X-ray-emitting M stars, the authors calculated L<sub>H-alpha</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub>. The quantities L<sub>H-alpha</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub> and L<sub>X</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub> are linearly related below L<sub>X</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub> ~ 3 x 10<sup>-4</sup>, while L<sub>H-alpha</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub> appears to turn over at larger L<sub>X</sub>/L<sub>bol</sub> values. Stars with reliable SDSS photometry have an ~0.1 mag blue excess in u-g, likely due to increased chromospheric continuum emission. Photometric metallicity estimates suggest that the sample is evenly split between the young and old disk populations of the Galaxy; the lowest activity sources belong to the old disk population, a clear signature of the decay of magnetic activity with age. This table was created by the HEASARC in January 2009 based on the electronic version of Tables 2 and 3 from the reference paper which were obtained from the ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/champlanex
- Title:
- ChaMPlane Galactic Bulge and Center X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHAMPLANEX
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Chandra Multiwavelength Plane (ChaMPlane) Survey catalog of X-ray point sources in the window and four Galactic bulge fields, specifically all source detections with net counts >= 1 in the 0.3-8 keV broad band. In the reference paper, the authors present the log N-log S and spatial distributions of X-ray point sources in seven Galactic bulge (GB) fields within 4 degrees of the Galactic center (GC). They compare the properties of 1159 X-ray point sources discovered in their deep (100 ks) Chandra observations of three low extinction Window fields near the GC with the X-ray sources in the other GB fields centered around Sgr B2, Sgr C, the Arches Cluster, and Sgr A* using Chandra archival data. To reduce the systematic errors induced by the uncertain X-ray spectra of the sources coupled with field-and-distance-dependent extinction, they classify the X-ray sources using quantile analysis and estimate their fluxes accordingly. The result indicates that the GB X-ray population is highly concentrated at the center, more heavily than the stellar distribution models. It extends out to more than 1.4 degrees from the GC, and the projected density follows an empirical radial relation inversely proportional to the offset from the GC. They also compare the total X-ray and infrared surface brightness using the Chandra and Spitzer observations of the regions. The radial distribution of the total infrared surface brightness from the 3.6-micron band images appears to resemble the radial distribution of the X-ray point sources better than that predicted by the stellar distribution models. Assuming a simple power-law model for the X-ray spectra, the closer to the GC, the intrinsically harder the X-ray spectra appear, but adding an iron emission line at 6.7 keV in the model allows the spectra of the GB X-ray sources to be largely consistent across the region. This implies that the majority of these GB X-ray sources can be of the same or similar type. Their X-ray luminosity and spectral properties support the idea that the most likely candidate is magnetic cataclysmic variables (CVs), primarily intermediate polars (IPs). Their observed number density is also consistent with the majority being IPs, provided the relative CV to star density in the GB is not smaller than the value in the local solar neighborhood. This table was created by the HEASARC in January 2010, based on the electronic version of Table 2 from the reference paper, which was obtained from the Astrophysical Journal web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cxogsgsrc
- Title:
- Chandra ACIS GSG Point-Like X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CXOGSGSRC
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra archival data are a valuable resource for various studies on different X-ray astronomy topics. In this paper, the authors utilize this wealth of information and present a uniformly processed data set, which can be used to address a wide range of scientific questions. The data analysis procedures are applied to 10,029 Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer observations, which produces 363,530 source detections belonging to 217,828 distinct X-ray sources. This number is twice the size of the Chandra Source Catalog (Version 1.1). The catalogs in this paper provide abundant estimates of the detected X-ray source properties, including source positions, counts, colors, fluxes, luminosities, variability statistics, etc. Cross-correlation of these objects with galaxies shows that 17,828 sources are located within the D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of 1,110 galaxies, and 7,504 sources are located between the D<sub>25</sub> and 2*D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of 910 galaxies. Contamination analysis with the log N-log S relation indicates that 51.3% of objects within 2*D<sub>25</sub> isophotes are truly relevant to galaxies, and the "net" source fraction increases to 58.9%, 67.3%, and 69.1% for sources with luminosities above 10<sup>37</sup>, 10<sup>38</sup>, and 10<sup>39</sup> erg/s, respectively. Among the possible scientific uses of this catalog mentioned in this paper, the authors discuss the possibility of studying intra-observation variability, inter-observation variability, and supersoft sources (SSSs). About 17,092 detected sources above 10 counts are classified as variable in individual observation with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (K-S) criterion (P<sub>K-S</sub> < 0.01). There are 99,647 sources observed more than once and 11,843 sources observed 10 times or more, offering a wealth of data with which to explore their long-term variability. There are 1,638 individual objects (~2,350 detections) classified as SSSs. As a quite interesting subclass, detailed studies on X-ray spectra and optical spectroscopic follow-up are needed to categorize these SSSs and pinpoint their properties. In addition, this survey can enable a wide range of statistical studies, such as X-ray activity in different types of stars, X-ray luminosity functions in different types of galaxies, and multi-wavelength identification and classification of different X-ray populations. The ACIS observations were downloaded from the Chandra Data Archive on 2014 December 4, yielding 10,047 ACIS observations. Eighteen observations with PI as "Calibration" or Exposure as zero were excluded. Finally, there are 10,029 ACIS observations containing 4,146 ACIS-I observations and 5,883 ACIS-S observations in our sample. The exposure times for the selected observations cover a range from 50 s to 190 ks, with a total of 221,851 ks. This HEASARC table comprises the list of 218,789 X-ray point sources detected in the Chandra ACIS Survey and listed in the machine-readable version of Table 5 from the reference paper. This number is somewhat larger than the number of independent sources (217,828) stated in the abstract and Section 5 of the reference paper because if a source lies within 2*R<sub>25</sub> of more than one galaxy it is listed multiple times, once for each galaxy with which it may be associated. All parameters are the same for such duplicate cases except for the entry_number, alt_name, adopted_distance, luminosity, src_nucleus_offset, norm_src_nucleus_offset and (in some cases) source_type. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2017 primarily based on CDS Catalog J/ApJS/224/40/ file table5.dat, the catalog of X-ray point sources in the Chandra ACIS Survey. The positional information for these sources was taken from CDS Catalog J/ApJS/224/40/ file table3.dat, the list of separation detections for these X-ray sources, using the first listed detection in each case. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chansngcat
- Title:
- Chandra ACIS Survey for X-Ray AGN in Nearby Galaxies
- Short Name:
- CHANSNGCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The authors searched the public archive of the Chandra X-ray Observatory as of 2016 March and assembled a sample of 719 galaxies within 50 Mpc with available Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer observations. By cross-correlation with the optical or near-infrared nuclei of these galaxies, 314 of them are identified to have an X-ray active galactic nucleus (AGN). The majority of them are low-luminosity AGNs and are unlikely X-ray binaries based upon their spatial distribution and luminosity functions. The AGN fraction is around 60% for elliptical galaxies and early-type spirals, but drops to roughly 20% for Sc and later types, consistent with previous findings in the optical. However, the X-ray survey is more powerful in finding weak AGNs, especially from regions with active star formation that may mask the optical AGN signature. For example, 31% of the H II nuclei are found to harbor an X-ray AGN. For most objects, a single power-law model subject to interstellar absorption is adequate to fit the spectrum, and the typical photon index is found to be around 1.8. For galaxies with a non-detection, their stacked Chandra image shows an X-ray excess with a luminosity of a few times 10<sup>37</sup> erg/s on average around the nuclear region, possibly composed of faint X-ray binaries. This paper reports on the technique and results of the survey; in-depth analysis and discussion of the results were to be reported in forthcoming papers, e.g., She et al. (2017, ApJ, 842, 131). The sample was assembled based on Chandra/ACIS observations that were publicly available as of 2016 March. The authors first generated a full list of ACIS observations, and then searched in the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) for galaxies within 50 Mpc whose nuclear positions were less than 8 arcminutes from the aim point of any Chandra observation. The adopted distances were taken from NED, in the following order of priority: surface brightness fluctuations, Cepheid variables, tip of the red giant branch, Type Ia supernovae, the fundamental plane, Faber-Jackson relation, Tully-Fisher relation. If more than one reference is available for the distance by the same means, the latest one is selected, unless otherwise specified. Whenever possible, the authors obtain positions of the galaxy nuclei based on measurements from near-infrared images, which suffer from less obscuration by dust or confusion from young star-forming regions. Most of the data come from the Two-Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) extended source catalog (Skrutskie et al. 2006, AJ, 131, 1163), or NED otherwise. In a few cases, the NED positions come from radio observations. The authors discarded galaxies whose nuclear positions in NED were obtained from X-ray observations. This table was created by the HEASARC in September 2017 based upon the <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJ/835/223">CDS Catalog J/ApJ/835/223</a> files table1.dat, table2.dat and table4.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chngpscliu
- Title:
- Chandra ACIS Survey of Nearby Galaxies X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHNGPSCLIU
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra data archive is a treasure trove for various studies, and in this study the author exploits this valuable resource to study the X-ray point source populations in nearby galaxies. By 2007 December 14, 383 galaxies within 40 Mpc with isophotal major axes above 1 arcminute had been observed by 626 public ACIS observations, most of which were for the first time analyzed by this survey to study the X-ray point sources. Uniform data analysis procedures were applied to the 626 ACIS observations and led to the detection of 28,099 point sources, which belong to 17,559 independent sources. These include 8700 sources observed twice or more and 1000 sources observed 10 times or more, providing a wealth of data to study the long-term variability of these X-ray sources. Cross-correlation of these sources with galaxy isophotes led to 8,519 sources within the D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of 351 galaxies, 3,305 sources between the D<sub>25</sub> and 2 * D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of 309 galaxies, and an additional 5,735 sources outside the 2 * D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of galaxies. This survey has produced a uniform catalog, by far the largest, of 11,824 X-ray point sources within 2 * D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of 380 galaxies. Contamination analysis using the log N-log S relation shows that 74% of the sources within the 2 * D<sub>25</sub> isophotes above 10<sup>39</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>, 71% of the sources above 10<sup>38</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>, 63% of the sources above 10<sup>37</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>, and 56% of all sources are truly associated with the galaxies. Meticulous efforts have identified 234 X-ray sources with galactic nuclei of nearby galaxies. This archival survey leads to 300 ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) with L<sub>X</sub> in the 0.3-8 keV band >= 2 x 10<sup>39</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup> within the D<sub>25</sub> isophotes, 179 ULXs between the D<sub>25</sub> and the 2 * D<sub>25</sub> isophotes, and a total of 479 ULXs within 188 host galaxies, with about 324 ULXs truly associated with the host galaxies based on the contamination analysis. About 4% of the sources exhibited at least one supersoft phase, and 70 sources are classified as ultraluminous supersoft sources with L<sub>X</sub> (0.3-8 keV) >= 2 x 10<sup>38</sup> erg s<sup>-1</sup>. With a uniform data set and good statistics, this survey enables future works on various topics, such as X-ray luminosity functions for the ordinary X-ray binary populations in different types of galaxies, and X-ray properties of galactic nuclei. This table contains the list of 17,559 'independent' X-ray point sources that was contained in table 4 of the reference paper. As the author notes in Section 5 of this paper, there are 341 sources projected within 2 galaxies with overlapping domains which are listed for both galaxies. The 5,735 sources lieing outside the 2* D<sub>25</sub> isophotes of the galaxies are also included in this table. For these sources, the X-ray luminosities are computed as if they were in a galaxy of that group, which may or may not be the case; thus, they may not be their 'true' luminosities, but are listed for the purposes of comparison. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2011 based on the electronic version of Table 4 of the reference paper which was obtained from the Astrophysical Journal web site. Some of the values for the name parameter in the HEASARC's implementation of this table were corrected in April 2018. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chanulxcat
- Title:
- Chandra Archive Of Galaxies Ultraluminous X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHANULXCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- One hundred fifty-five (the abstract in the paper erroneously states the number to be 154) discrete, non-nuclear, ultraluminous X-ray (ULX) sources, with spectroscopically determined intrinsic X-ray luminosities greater than 10<sup>39</sup> erg/s, have been identified in 82 galaxies that were observed with Chandra's Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS). Positions, X-ray luminosities, and spectral and timing characteristics of these ULXs are contained in this table. Eighty-three percent of ULX candidates have spectra that can be described as absorbed power laws with mean index Gamma = 1.74 and column density N<sub>H</sub> = 2.24 x 10<sup>21</sup> atoms cm<sup>-2</sup>, or ~5 times the average Galactic column. About 20% of the ULXs have much steeper indices indicative of a soft, and likely thermal, spectrum. The locations of ULXs in their host galaxies are strongly peaked toward their galaxy centers. The deprojected radial distribution of the ULX candidates is somewhat steeper than an exponential disk, indistinguishable from that of the weaker sources. About 5%-15% of ULX candidates are variable during the Chandra observations (which average 39.5 ks). Comparison of the cumulative X-ray luminosity functions of the ULXs to Chandra Deep Field results suggests ~25% of the sources may be background objects, including 14% of the ULX candidates in the sample of spiral galaxies and 44% of those in elliptical galaxies, implying the elliptical galaxy ULX population is severely compromised by background active galactic nuclei. Correlations with host galaxy properties confirm the number and total X-ray luminosity of the ULXs are associated with recent star formation and with galaxy merging and interactions. The preponderance of ULXs in star-forming galaxies as well as their similarities to less-luminous sources suggest they originate in a young but short-lived population such as the high-mass X-ray binaries, with a smaller contribution (based on spectral slope) from recent supernovae. The number of ULXs in elliptical galaxies scales with host galaxy mass and can be explained most simply as the high-luminosity end of the low-mass X-ray binary population. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2007 based on CDS catalog J/ApJS/154/519 file table2.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cbfgrxecxo
- Title:
- Chandra Bulge Field X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CBFGRXECXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- Apparently diffuse X-ray emission has been known to exist along the central quarter of the Galactic Plane since the beginning of X-ray astronomy; this is referred to as the Galactic Ridge X-ray emission (GRXE). Recent deep X-ray observations have shown that numerous X-ray point sources account for a large fraction of the GRXE in the hard band (2 - 8 keV). However, the nature of these sources is poorly understood. Using the deepest X-ray observations made in the Chandra bulge field, the authors present the result of a coherent photometric and spectroscopic analysis of individual X-ray point sources for the purpose of constraining their nature and deriving their fractional contributions to the hard-band continuum and Fe K line emission of the GRXE. Based on the X-ray color-color diagram, they divided the point sources into three groups: A (hard), B (soft and broad spectrum), and C (soft and peaked spectrum). The group A sources are further decomposed spectrally into thermal and non-thermal sources with different fractions in different flux ranges. From their X-ray properties, the authors speculate that the group A non-thermal sources are mostly active galactic nuclei and the thermal sources are mostly white dwarf (WD) binaries such as magnetic and non-magnetic cataclysmic variables (CVs), pre-CVs, and symbiotic stars, whereas the group B and C sources are X-ray active stars in flares and quiescence, respectively. In the log N - log S curve of the 2 - 8 keV band, the group A non-thermal sources are dominant above ~10<sup>-14</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s, which is gradually taken over by Galactic sources in the fainter flux ranges. The Fe K-alpha emission is mostly from the group A thermal (WD binaries) and the group B (X-ray active stars) sources. The authors retrieved 10 archived data sets of the Chandra bulge field (CBF) taken with the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer-I (ACIS-I; 0.5 - 8.0 keV energy band with a spectral resolution of ~280 eV for the full width at half-maximum at 5.9keV) array on board Chandra. The observations were carried out from 2008 May to August with a total exposure time of ~900 ks. The authors first extracted point-source candidates using the wavdetect algorithm in the CIAO package. They set the significance threshold at 2.5 x 10<sup>-5</sup>, implying that one false positive detection would be expected at every 4 x 10<sup>4</sup> trials. As a result, 2596 source candidates were found. The number of their source candidates is nearly the same as that found by Revnivtsev et al.(2009, A&A, 507, 1211) in the same region. To select significant point sources from the candidates, the authors examined their validity based on their photometric significance (PS) and the probability of no source (P<sub>B</sub>). The PS is defined as the background-subtracted source counts (C<sub>net</sub>) divided by its background counts normalized by the area. P<sub>B</sub> is the probability that the source is attributable to a background fluctuation, assuming Poisson statistics. The authors recognized a source to be valid if it satisfied both these criteria: PS >= 1.0 and P<sub>B</sub> <= 1.0 x 10<sup>-2</sup>. As a result, they obtained 2002 valid point sources. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2014 based on CDS catalog J/ApJ/766/14 file table2.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/ccosmosoid
- Title:
- Chandra COSMOS (C-COSMOS) Survey Optical/IR Counterparts Catalog
- Short Name:
- CCOSMOSOID
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra COSMOS Survey (C-COSMOS) is a large, 1.8-Ms, Chandra program that has imaged the central 0.9 deg<sup>2</sup> of the COSMOS field down to limiting depths of 1.9 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the soft (0.5-2 keV) band, 7.3 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the hard (2-10 keV) band, and 5.7 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the full (0.5-10 keV) band. In this Paper III of the series of papers on this survey, the authors report the i, K, and 3.6-um identifications of the 1761 X-ray point sources. They use the likelihood ratio technique to derive the association of optical/infrared counterparts for 97% of the X-ray sources. For most of the remaining 3%, the presence of multiple counterparts or the faintness of the possible counterpart prevented a unique association. For only 10 X-ray sources, they were not able to associate a counterpart, mostly due to the presence of a very bright field source close by. Only two sources are truly empty fields. The full catalog, including spectroscopic and photometric redshifts and classification described here in detail, is available herein. See also the related table <a href="ccosmoscat.html">CCOSMOSCAT</a> for the the surveyed X-ray point sources. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2012, based on the <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJS/201/30">CDS Catalog J/ApJS/201/30</a> file catalog.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/ccosmphotz
- Title:
- Chandra COSMOS (C-COSMOS) Survey Photometric Redshift Catalog
- Short Name:
- CCOSMPHOTZ
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- In their paper, the authors release accurate photometric redshifts for 1692 counterparts to Chandra sources in the central square degree of the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field. The availability of a large training set of spectroscopic redshifts that extends to faint magnitudes enabled photometric redshifts comparable to the highest quality results presently available for normal galaxies. The authors demonstrate that morphologically extended, faint X-ray sources without optical variability are more accurately described by a library of normal galaxies (corrected for emission lines) than by active galactic nucleus (AGN) dominated templates, even if these sources have AGNlike X-ray luminosities. Preselecting the library on the bases of the source properties allowed them to reach an accuracy sigma[Delta-z/(1+Z<sub>spec</sub>)] ~ 0.015 with a fraction of outliers of 5.8% for the entire Chandra-COSMOS sample. In addition, in this study the authors released revised photometric redshifts for the 1735 optical counterparts of the XMM-detected sources over the entire 2 deg<sup>2</sup> of COSMOS (these sources are listed in the HEASARC table XMMCPHOTZ). For 248 sources, their updated photometric redshift differs from the previous release by Delta-z > 0.2. These changes are predominantly due to the inclusion of newly available deep H-band^ photometry (H<sub>AB</sub> = 24 mag). The authors illustrate once again the importance of a spectroscopic training sample and how an assumption about the nature of a source together, with the number and the depth of the available bands, influences the accuracy of the photometric redshifts determined for AGN. These considerations should be kept in mind when defining the observational strategies of upcoming large surveys targeting AGNs, such as eROSITA at X-ray energies and the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder Evolutionary Map of the Universe in the radio band. This table contains the photometric redshifts and related quantities for 1694 (note that there appears to be 2 more sources than the above-quoted abstract states) Chandra sources in the central square degree of the COSMOS field. Notice that in the original as-published paper no positional information was provided. The HEASARC has assumed that the source numbers used in the present catalog are in the same source numbering scheme as used by Elvis et al. (2009, ApJS, 184, 158, the Chandra COSMOS Survey Point Source Catalog, available at the HEASARC as the CCOSMOSCAT table) and thus obtained the positions and (position-based) names corresponding to these sources. This table was created by the HEASARC in November 2011 based on an electronic version of Table 4 from the reference paper which was obtained from the ApJ website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/ccosmoscat
- Title:
- Chandra COSMOS (C-COSMOS) Survey X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CCOSMOSCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra COSMOS Survey (C-COSMOS) is a large, 1.8 Ms, Chandra program that has imaged the central 0.5 deg<sup>2</sup> of the COSMOS field (centered at RA, Dec of 10 hours , +02 degrees) with an effective exposure of ~ 160 ks, and an outer 0.4 deg<sup>2</sup> area with an effective exposure of ~ 80 ks. The limiting source detection depths are 1.9 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the soft (0.5 - 2 keV) band, 7.3 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the hard (2 - 10 keV) band, and 5.7 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the full (0.5 - 10 keV) band. In this paper, the authors describe the strategy, design, and execution of the C-COSMOS survey, and present the catalog of 1761 point sources detected at a probability of being spurious of < 2 x 10<sup>-5</sup> (1655 in the full, 1340 in the soft, and 1017 in the hard bands). By using a grid of 36 heavily (~ 50%) overlapping pointing positions with the ACIS-I imager, a remarkably uniform (+/-12%) exposure across the inner 0.5 deg<sup>2</sup> field was obtained, leading to a sharply defined lower flux limit. The widely different point-spread functions obtained in each exposure at each point in the field required a novel source detection method, because of the overlapping tiling strategy, which is described in a companion paper. This method produced reliable sources down to a 7-12 counts, as verified by the resulting log N-log S curve, with sub-arcsecond positions, enabling optical and infrared identifications of virtually all sources, as reported in a second companion paper. Supporting data products for this table (including images, event files, and exposure maps) are available at the <a href="https://cosmos.astro.caltech.edu/page/xray/">COSMOS Survey website</a> and at <a href="https://irsa.ipac.caltech.edu/data/COSMOS/">IRSA</a>. At the IRSA website, it is also possible to search a database that includes "postage stamps" of the X-ray data for each source, along with the multi-wavelength optical and infrared data, including the I-band, K-band, and Spitzer 3.6-micron (Band 1) images used in the Part III paper (Civano et al. 2012) to identify the sources. See also the related table <a href="ccosmosoid.html">CCOSMOSOID</a> for the optical and infrared identifications of the surveyed X-ray point sources. This table was created by the HEASARC in November 2009 based on an electronic version of the C-COSMOS Catalog which was obtained from the Astrophysical Journal web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfn2ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field North 2-Megasecond Catalog
- Short Name:
- Chan/DF2N
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra Deep Field North (CDFN) 2-Megasecond Catalog contains the point sources found in the ~2 Megasecond (Ms) exposure of the Chandra Deep Field North, currently the deepest X-ray observation of the universe in the 0.5 -8.0 keV band. Five hundred and three (503) X-ray sources were detected over an ~448 square arcminute area in up to seven X-ray bands. Twenty (20) of these X-ray sources lie in the central ~5.3 square arcminute Hubble Deep Field North (13600 (+3800,-3000) sources/deg^2). The on-axis sensitivity limits are ~2.5x10^-17 ergs/cm^2/s (0.5 - 2.0 keV) and 1.4x10^-16 ergs/cm^2/s (2 - 8 keV). Source positions are determined using matched-filter and centroiding techniques; the median positional uncertainty is ~0.3". The X-ray colors of the detected sources indicate a broad variety of source types, although absorbed AGN (including a small number of possible Compton-thick sources) are clearly the dominant type. The average backgrounds in the 0.5 - 2.0 keV and 2 - 8 keV bands are 0.056 and 0.135 counts Ms^-1 pixel^-1, respectively. The background count distributions are very similar to Poisson distributions. This 2 Ms exposure is approximately photon limited in all seven X-ray bands for regions close to the aim point. This observation does not suffer from source confusion within ~6 arcminutes of the aim point. This table was created by the HEASARC in April 2004 based on CDS catalog table J/AJ/126/539/cdfn.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfn1ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field North 1-Megasecond Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChanDF
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table is the Chandra Deep Field North 1-Megasecond Catalog. It lists point sources detected in an extremely deep X-ray survey (1 Ms) of the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF-N) and its environs (~450 square arcminutes) which has been performed with the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer on board the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. This is one of the two deepest X-ray surveys ever performed; for point sources near the aim point, it reaches 0.5 - 2.0 keV and 2 - 8 keV flux limits of ~3 x 10^-17 and ~2 x 10^-16 ergs cm-2 s-1, respectively. 370 distinct point sources have been detected: 360 in the full (0.5 - 8.0 keV) band, 325 in the soft (0.5 - 2.0 keV) band, 265 in the hard (2 - 8 keV) band, and 145 in the ultrahard (4 - 8 keV) band. Source positions are accurate to within 0.6 - 1.7 arcseconds (at ~90% confidence), depending mainly on the off-axis angle. Source densities of 7100 (+1100, -940) deg^-2 (at 4.2 x 10^-17 ergs cm^-2 s^-1) and 4200 (+670, -580) deg^-2 (at 3.8 x 10^-16 ergs cm^-2 s^-1) are observed in the soft and hard bands, respectively. This online catalog was created by the HEASARC in March 2002 based on a machine-readable version of Table 3 of Brandt et al. (2001) that was obtained from the Astronomical Journal website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cdfn2msnew
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field North 2-Megasecond Improved Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CDFN2MSNEW
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the improved point-source catalog for the 2-Ms Chandra Deep Field-North (CDF-N) Survey, implementing a number of recent improvements in Chandra source-cataloguing methodology. For the CDF-N, the main catalog (entries from which are indicated with parameter values of source_sample = "Main" in this HEASARC representation) contains 683 X-ray sources detected with wavdetect at a false-positive probability threshold of 10<sup>-5</sup> that also satisfy a binomial-probability source-selection criterion of P <= 0.004. Such an approach maximizes the number of reliable sources detected: a total of 196 main-catalog sources are new compared to the Alexander et al. (2003, AJ, 126, 539) CDF-N main catalog. The authors also provide a CDF-N supplementary catalog that consist of 72 sources (entries from which are indicated with parameter values of source_sample = "Supp" in this HEASARC representation) detected at the same wavdetect threshold and having P of 0.004-0.1 and K<sub>s</sub> <= 22.9 mag counterparts. For all 755 CDF-N sources, including the 234 newly detected ones (these being generally fainter and more obscured), the authors determine X-ray source positions utilizing centroid and matched-filter techniques; they also provide multi-wavelength identifications, apparent magnitudes of counterparts, spectroscopic and/or photometric redshifts, basic source classifications, and estimates of observed active galactic nucleus and galaxy source densities around respective field centers. Simulations show that the CDF-N main catalog is highly reliable and reasonably complete. Background and sensitivity analyses indicate that the on-axis mean flux limits reached represent a factor of ~1.5-2.0 improvement over the previous CDF-N limit. The 2 Ms CDF-N consists of a total of 20 separate Chandra observations taken between 1999 November 13 and 2002 February 22 with ACIS (see Alexander et al., 2003, AJ, 126, 539 for more details). This table was created by the HEASARC in August 2016 based on CDS Catalog J/ApJS/224/15 files table3.dat (the main source catalog) and table6.dat (the supplementary source catalog). This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cdfn2msoid
- Title:
- ChandraDeepFieldNorth2-MegasecondOptical&IRCatalog
- Short Name:
- Chan/DF2S
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra Deep Field North (CDFN) 2-Megasecond (2Ms) Optical and IR Catalog is an optical and near-infrared catalog for the X-ray sources in the 2Ms Chandra observation of the Hubble Deep Field North region. It has high-quality multicolor imaging data for all 503 X-ray point sources in the X-ray-selected catalog and reliable spectroscopic redshifts for 284. The authors have spectroscopically identified six high-redshift (z > 1) type II quasars (L<sub>2-8keV</sub> > 10<sup>44</sup> ergs/s) in their sample. The spectroscopic completeness for the R <= 24 sources is 87%. The spectroscopic redshift distribution shows two broad redshift spikes that have clearly grown over those originally seen in the 1Ms exposure. The spectroscopically identified extragalactic sources already comprise 75% of the measured 2-8 keV light. Redshift slices versus 2-8 keV flux show that an impressive 54% of the measured 2-8 keV light arises from sources at z < 1 and 68% from sources at z < 2. The X-ray sample is presented in Alexander et al. (2003, AJ, 126, 539, hereafter ABB2003) and in CDS Catalog <J/AJ/126/539>, and is also available in the HEASARC Browse system as the CHANDFN2MS table. The optical imaging data consist of Johnson B, Johnson V, Cousins R, Cousins I, and Sloan z' observations obtained with the Subaru prime-focus camera Suprime-Cam on the Subaru 8.2m telescope during February-April of 2001 and 2002. This table was created by the HEASARC in April 2004 based on CDS Catalog J/AJ/126/632/table1a.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cdfn2msoi2
- Title:
- ChandraDeepFieldNorthUpdatedOptical&IRCatalog
- Short Name:
- CDFN2MSOI2
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the redshift catalog for the X-ray sources detected in the Chandra Deep Field-North (CDF-N). The catalog for the CDF-N includes redshifts from previous work. The authors have extended the redshift information for the full sample using photometric redshifts. The goal of the OPTX Project is to use this survey, together with the Chandra Large-Area Synoptic X-Ray Survey (CLASXS) and the Chandra Lockman Area North Survey (CLANS), which are among the most spectroscopically complete surveys to date, to analyze the effect of spectral type on the shape and evolution of the X-ray luminosity functions and to compare the optical spectral types with the X-ray spectral properties. The CLANS and CLASXS surveys bridge the gap between the ultra-deep pencil-beam surveys, such as the Chandra Deep Fields, and the shallower, very large-area surveys. This table also contains updated optical and infrared photometric data for the X-ray sources in the CDF-N. Typical photometric uncertainties are given in Section 3.6 of the reference paper (Trouille et al. 2008). The X-ray information for the sources detected in the CDF-N 2-megasecond exposure which was published in Alexander et al. (2003, AJ, 126, 539) is available as the HEASARC CHANDFN2MS table, while the earlier catalog which listed information about optical and infrared counterparts (Barger et al. 2003, AJ, 126, 632) is available as the HEASARC CDFN2MSOID table. This table was created by the HEASARC in January 2009 based on the electronic version of Table 13 from the paper which was obtained from the ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/cdfsagncxo
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field South AGN Spectral Properties Catalog
- Short Name:
- CDFSAGNCXO
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the results of a detailed X-ray spectral analysis of the sources in the 1 Ms catalog of the Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS, Giacconi et al. 2002, <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJS/139/369">CDS Cat. J/ApJS/139/369</a>, available in Browse as the CHANDFS1MS table), taking advantage of optical spectroscopy and photometric redshifts for 321 extragalactic sources out of the total sample of 347 sources. As a default spectral model, the authors adopt a power law with a slope Gamma with an intrinsic redshifted absorption N<sub>H</sub>, a fixed Galactic absorption and an unresolved Fe emission line. For 82 X-ray bright sources, they are able to perform the X-ray spectral analysis leaving both Gamma and N<sub>H</sub> free. The weighted mean value for the slope of the power law is 1.75 +/- 0.02, and the distribution of best fit values shows an intrinsic dispersion of 0.30. The authors do not find hints of a correlation between the spectral index Gamma and the intrinsic absorption column density N<sub>H</sub>. They then investigate the absorption distribution for the whole sample, deriving the N<sub>H</sub> values in faint sources by fixing Gamma to be 1.8. The authors find that the fraction of absorbed sources (with N<sub>H</sub> > 10<sup>22</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup>) in the sample is constant (at the level of about 75%) or moderately increasing with redshift. Finally, they compare the optical classification to the X-ray spectral properties, confirming that the correspondence of unabsorbed (absorbed) X-ray sources to optical type I (type II) AGN is accurate for at least 80% of the sources with spectral identification (1/3 of the total X-ray sample). This table was created by the HEASARC in August 2007 primarily based on <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/A+A/451/457">CDS Catalog J/A+A/451/457</a> file table1.dat. The positions of the X-ray sources were taken from <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJS/139/369">CDS Catalog J/ApJS/139/369</a> (Giacconi et al. 2002), except for that of source number 901 which was taken from Table 5 of Szokoly et al. (2004, ApJS, 155, 271). This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfs1ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field South 1-Megasecond Catalog
- Short Name:
- CDFS1MS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS) 1-Megasecond Catalog is the source catalog obtained from a 942 kilosecond exposure, using the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS-I) on the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Eleven individual pointings made between 1999 October and 2000 December were combined to generate the final image used for object detection. Catalog generation proceeded simultaneously using two different methods: a method of the authors' own design using a modified version of the SExtractor algorithm, and a wavelet transform technique developed specifically for Chandra observations. The detection threshold was set in order to have less than 10 spurious sources, as assessed by extensive simulations. The catalog as published was subdivided into four sections: the primary list consisting of objects common to the two detection methods, two secondary lists containing sources which were detected by either the SExtractor algorithm alone or by the wavelet technique alone, and the fourth list consisting of possible diffuse or extended sources. The flux limits at the aimpoint for the soft (0.5 - 2 keV) and hard (2 - 10 keV) bands are 5.5 x 10^-17 erg/s/cm^2 and 4.5 x 10^-16 erg/s/cm^2, respectively. The total number of sources is 346; out of them, 307 were detected in the 0.5 - 2 keV band, and 251 in the 2 - 10 keV band. Optical identifications are also presented for the catalogued sources. The primary optical data are R band imaging from VLT/FORS1 to a depth of R ~ 26.5 (Vega). In regions of the field not covered by the VLT/FORS1 deep imaging, the authors use R-band data obtained with the Wide Field Imager (WFI) on the ESO-MPI 2.2 m telescope, as part of the ESO Imaging Survey (EIS), which cover the entire X-ray survey. The FORS1/Chandra offsets are small, ~1 arcsecond. Coordinate cross-correlation finds 85% of the Chandra sources covered by FORS1 R to have counterparts within the 3-sigma error box (>~1.5 arcseconds, depending on off-axis angle and X-ray signal-to-noise). The unidentified fraction of sources, approximately 10% - 15%, is close to the limit expected from the observed X-ray flux to R-band ratio distribution for the identified sample. This online catalog was created by the HEASARC in June 2002 based on machine-readable versions of 2, 3 and 4 of Giacconi et al. (2002) that were obtained from the CDS. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfs4ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field South 4-Megasecond Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHANDFS4MS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the main Chandra source catalog for the 4 megasecond (Ms) Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S), which is the deepest Chandra survey to date and covers an area of 464.5 arcmin<sup>2</sup>. It contains 740 X-ray sources that are detected with wavdetect at a false-positive probability threshold of 10<sup>-5</sup> in at least one of three X-ray bands (0.5-8 keV, full band; 0.5-2 keV, soft band; and 2-8 keV, hard band) and also satisfy a binomial-probability source-selection criterion of P < 0.004 (i.e., the probability of sources not being real is less than 0.004); this approach is designed to maximize the number of reliable sources detected. A total of 300 main-catalog sources are new compared to the previous 2 Ms CDF-S main-catalog (the HEASARC CHANDFS2MS table) sources. The authors determined X-ray source positions using centroid and matched-filter techniques and obtained a median positional uncertainty of ~0.42 arcseconds. In their paper, they also provided a supplementary catalog (not included in this HEASARC table), which consists of 36 sources that are detected with wavdetect at a false-positive probability threshold of 10<sup>-5</sup>, satisfy the condition of 0.004 < P < 0.1, and have an optical counterpart with R < 24. Multiwavelength identifications, basic optical/infrared/radio photometry, and spectroscopic/photometric redshifts are provided for the X-ray sources in the main and supplementary catalogs. Seven hundred sixteen (~97%) of the 740 main-catalog sources have multiwavelength counterparts, with 673 (~94% of 716) having either spectroscopic or photometric redshifts. The 740 main-catalog sources span broad ranges of full-band flux and 0.5-8 keV luminosity; the 300 new main-catalog sources span similar ranges although they tend to be systematically lower. Basic analyses of the X-ray and multiwavelength properties of the sources indicate that >75% of the main-catalog sources are active galactic nuclei (AGNs); of the 300 new main-catalog sources, about 35% are likely normal and starburst galaxies, reflecting the rise of normal and starburst galaxies at the very faint flux levels uniquely accessible to the 4 Ms CDF-S. Near the center of the 4 Ms CDF-S (i.e., within an off-axis angle of 3'), the observed AGN and galaxy source densities have reached 9800 (+1300,-1100) deg<sup>-2</sup> and 6900 (+1100,-900) deg<sup>-2</sup>, respectively. Simulations show that the main catalog is highly reliable and is reasonably complete. The mean backgrounds (corrected for vignetting and exposure-time variations) are 0.063 and 0.178 counts Ms<sup>-1</sup> pixel<sup>-1</sup> (for a pixel size of 0.492 arcseconds) for the soft and hard bands, respectively; the majority of the pixels have zero background counts. The 4 Ms CDF-S reaches on-axis flux limits of ~3.2 x 10<sup>-17</sup>, 9.1 x 10<sup>-18</sup>, and 5.5 x 10<sup>-17</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> for the full, soft, and hard bands, respectively. An increase in the CDF-S exposure time by a factor of ~2-2.5 would provide further significant gains and probe key unexplored discovery space. This HEASARC table comprises Table 3 from the reference paper, the Main Chandra Source Catalog of 740 X-ray sources. The 36 optically bright Chandra sources that were listed in Table 6 of the reference paper are thus not included herein. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2011 based on an electronic version of Table 3 from the reference paper which was obtained from the ApJS web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfs2ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field South 2-Megasecond Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHANDFS2MS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains point-source catalogs for the ~2 Ms exposure of the Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S) this is one of the two most sensitive X-ray surveys ever performed. The survey covers an area of ~436 arcmin<sup>2</sup> and reaches on-axis sensitivity limits of ~1.9 x 10<sup>-17</sup> and ~1.3 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> for the 0.5-2.0 and 2-8 keV bands, respectively. Four hundred and sixty-two X-ray point sources (source_sample = 'Main CDF-S' in this table) are detected in at least one of three X-ray bands that were searched; 135 of these sources are new compared to the previous ~1 Ms CDF-S detections. Source positions are determined using centroid and matched-filter techniques; the median positional uncertainty is ~0.36". The X-ray-to-optical flux ratios of the newly detected sources indicate a variety of source types; ~55% of them appear to be active galactic nuclei, while ~45% appear to be starburst and normal galaxies. This table contains, in addition to the main Chandra catalog, the supplementary catalog of 86 X-ray sources (source_sample = 'CDF-S + E-CDF-S' in this table) in the ~2 Ms CDF-S footprint that was created by merging the ~250 ks Extended Chandra Deep Field-South with the CDF-S; this approach provides additional sensitivity in the outer portions of the CDF-S. This table also contains a second supplementary catalog (source_sample = 'Optically Bright' in this table) of 30 X-ray sources which was constructed by matching lower significance X-ray sources to bright optical counterparts (R < 23.8); the majority of these sources appear to be starburst and normal galaxies. The total number of sources in this table, which contains the main and 2 supplementary catalogs, is thus 578. Optical R-band counterparts and basic optical and infrared photometry are provided for the X-ray sources in the main and supplementary catalogs. The authors also include existing spectroscopic redshifts for 224 of the X-ray sources. The average backgrounds in the 0.5-2.0 and 2-8 keV bands are 0.066 and 0.167 counts Ms<sup>-1</sup> pixel<sup>-1</sup>, respectively, and the background counts follow Poisson distributions. The effective exposure times and sensitivity limits of the CDF-S are now comparable to those of the ~2 Ms Chandra Deep Field-North (CDF-N). In their paper, the authors also present cumulative number counts for the main catalog and compare the results to those for the CDF-N. The soft-band number counts for these two fields agree well with each other at fluxes higher than ~2 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>, while the CDF-S number counts are up to ~25% smaller than those for the CDF-N at fluxes below ~2 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the soft band and ~2 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the hard band, suggesting small field-to-field variations. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2008 based on the electronic version of Tables 2, 5 and 6 from the reference paper which were obtained from the ApJ web site. It was last modified by the HEASARC in July 2011. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chandfs7ms
- Title:
- Chandra Deep Field-South 7-Megasecond X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHANDFS7MS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the X-ray source catalogs for the ~7 Ms exposure of the Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S), which covers a total area of 484.2 square arcminutes. Utilizing WAVDETECT for initial source detection and ACIS Extract for photometric extraction and significance assessment, the authors have created a main source catalog (entries with source_sample = 'M' in this HEASARC table) containing 1,008 sources that are detected in up to three X-ray bands: 0.5-7.0 keV, 0.5-2.0 keV, and 2-7 keV. A supplementary source catalog entries with source_sample = 'S' in this HEASARC table) is also provided, including 47 lower-significance sources that have bright (K<sub>s</sub> <~ 23<sup>m</sup>) near-infrared (NIR) counterparts. The authors have identified multiwavelength counterparts for 992 (98.4%) of the 1,008 main-catalog sources, and they have collected redshifts for 986 of these sources, including 653 spectroscopic redshifts and 333 photometric redshifts. Based on the X-ray and multiwavelength properties, the authors have identified 711 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) from the main-catalog sources. Compared to the previous ~4 Ms CDF-S catalogs, 291 of the main-catalog sources are new detections. The observations utilized in this survey have achieved unprecedented X-ray sensitivity with average flux limits over the central ~1 arcmin<sup>2</sup> region of ~1.9 x 10<sup>-17</sup>, 6.4 x 10<sup>-18</sup>, and 2.7 x 10<sup>-17</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> in the three X-ray bands, respectively. In the reference paper, the authors provide cumulative number-count measurements observing, for the first time, that normal galaxies start to dominate the X-ray source population at the faintest 0.5-2.0 keV flux levels. The highest X-ray source density reaches ~50,500 deg<sup>-2</sup>, and 47% +/- 4% of these sources are AGNs (~23,900 deg<sup>-2</sup>). The authors adopted a binomial no-source probability value, P<sub>B</sub> < 0.007 as the criterion to prune their initial candidate source list and generate a main source catalog, which includes 1,008 sources with a ~97% multiwavelength-identification rate. This adopted P<sub>B</sub> threshold will have inevitably rejected real X-ray sources. To recover some of these real sources, the authors created a supplementary source catalog that contains lower-significance X-ray sources that have bright optical/NIR counterparts; the chance of a bright optical/NIR source being associated with a spurious X-ray detection is quite small. A total of 47 candidate CDF-S sources having 0.007 <= P<sub>B</sub> < 0.1 are associated with bright, K<sub>s</sub> <= 23<sup>m</sup>, TENIS sources, where the false-match rate is only 1.7%, and these 47 sources constitute the supplementary catalog. A Galactic column density of N<sub>H,Gal</sub> = 8.8 * 10<sup>19</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup> along the line of sight to the CDF-S is assumed in this study. All quoted magnitudes are in the AB system. A cosmology with H<sub>0</sub> = 67.8 km s<sup>-1</sup> Mpc<sup>-1</sup>, Omega<sub>M</sub> = 0.308, and Omega<sub>Lambda</sub> = 0.692 (Planck Collaboration et al. 2016 values) is used to calculate luminosities. This HEASARC table contains the 1,008 sources from the main Chandra source catalog (these entries are identified by the HEASARC-created source_sample parameter being set to 'M' in this table) and the 47 lower-significance sources from the supplementary NIR-bright Chandra source catalog (these entries are identified by the HEASARC-created source_sample parameter being set to 'S' in this table). This table thus has 1,055 entries. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2017 based upon electronic versions of Tables 4 and 5, the 'Main Chandra Source Catalog' and the 'Supplementary NIR-Bright Chandra Source Catalog', respectively, which were obtained from the ApJS website. Some of the values for the name parameter in the HEASARC's implementation of this table were corrected in April 2018. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chanextdfs
- Title:
- Chandra Extended Deep Field South Survey Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChanDFSS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the combined point-source catalogs for the Extended Chandra Deep Field- South (E-CDF-S) survey. The E-CDF-S consists of four contiguous 250 ks Chandra observations covering an approximately square region of total solid angle ~0.3 square degrees, which flank the existing ~1 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S). The survey reaches sensitivity limits of ~1.1 x 10^-16 and ~6.7 x 10^-16 ergs cm^-2 s^-1 for the 0.5-2.0 and 2-8 keV bands, respectively. 762 distinct X-ray point sources are detected within the E-CDF-S exposure; 589 of these sources are new (i.e., not previously detected in the ~1 Ms CDF-S). This brings the total number of X-ray point sources detected in the E-CDF-S region to 915 (via the E-CDF-S and ~1 Ms CDF-S observations). Source positions are determined using matched-filter and centroiding techniques; the median positional uncertainty is ~0.35". The basic X-ray and optical properties of these sources indicate a variety of source types, although absorbed active galactic nuclei (AGNs) seem to dominate. In addition to the main Chandra catalog, this table contains the supplementary source catalog with 33 lower-significance X-ray point sources that have bright optical counterparts (R < 23 mag). These sources generally have X-ray-to-optical flux ratios expected for normal and starburst galaxies, which lack a strong AGN component. The basic number-count results for the main Chandra catalog are in good agreement with the ~1 Ms CDF-S for sources with 0.5-2.0 and 2-8 keV fluxes greater than 3 x 10^-16 and 1 x 10^-15 ergs cm^-2 s^-1, respectively. This HEASARC table contains 809 entries: 762 entries corresponding to the 762 sources listed in the main catalog (Table 2 of the published paper), 14 sources from the cross-field source list (Table 3) which give properties for sources which were detected in more than one observational sources, e.g. there are two entries for the source with source_number = 367, one entry coming from the main catalog, the other entry from the cross-field catalog, and 33 entries corresponding to the 33 sources in the supplementary, optically bright source catalog (Table 6). The HEASARC has created a new parameter called source_type to identify from which of these 3 original tables any given entry comes from; it is set to 'main', 'crossfield' and 'supplement' for entries from Tables 2, 3, and 6, respectively. This online catalog was created by the HEASARC in January 2006 based on machine-readable versions of tables 2, 3, and 6 from the paper which were obtained from the ApJ website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/changbscat
- Title:
- Chandra Galactic Bulge Survey Full X-Ray Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHANGBSCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Chandra source list for the entire area of the Galactic Bulge Survey (GBS) based on the lists provided in Jonker et al. (2011, ApJ, 194, 18: Paper I) and Jonker et al. (2014, ApJS, 210, 18: Paper II). The previous version of this table, based solely on the data presented in Paper I, contained the Chandra source list based on the first three-quarters of the GBS that had been observed as of the date of writing of that paper. Among the goals of the GBS are constraining the neutron star (NS) equation of state and the black hole (BH) mass distribution via the identification of eclipsing NS and BH low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs). The latter goal will, in addition, be obtained by significantly enlarging the number of BH systems for which a BH mass can be derived. Further goals include constraining X-ray binary formation scenarios, in particular the common envelope phase and the occurrence of kicks, via source-type number counts and an investigation of the spatial distribution of X-ray binaries, respectively. The GBS targets two strips of 6 degrees by 1 degrees (12 deg<sup>2</sup> in total), one above (1<sup>o</sup> < b < 2<sup>o</sup>) and the other below (-2<sup>o</sup> < b < -1<sup>o</sup>) the Galactic plane in the direction of the Galactic center at X-ray, optical and near-infrared wavelengths. By avoiding the Galactic plane (-1<sup>o</sup> < b < 1<sup>o</sup>) the authors limit the influence of extinction on the X-ray and optical emission but still sample relatively large number densities of sources. The survey is designed such that a large fraction of the X-ray sources can be identified from their optical spectra. The X-ray survey, by design, covers a large area on the sky while the depth is shallow, using 2 ks per Chandra pointing. In this way, the authors maximize the predicted number ratio of (quiescent) LMXBs to cataclysmic variables. The survey is approximately homogeneous in depth to a 0.5-10 keV flux of 7.7 x 10<sup>-14</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>. As of Paper I, the authors had covered about three-fourths (8.3 deg<sup>2</sup>) of the projected survey area with Chandra observations providing 1234 unique X-ray sources. In Paper II, the authors find 424 additional X-ray sources in the 63 Chandra observations that they report on there. In the papers, the authors discuss the characteristics and the X-ray variability of the brightest of the sources as well as the radio properties from existing radio surveys. They point out an interesting asymmetry in the number of X-ray sources as a function of their Galactic l and b coordinates which is probably caused by differences in average extinction towards the different parts of the GBS survey area. This table was originally ingested by the HEASARC in June 2011 based on an electronic version of Table 3 from Paper I which was obtained from the ApJS web site. The current version of this table was ingested by the HEASARC in January 2014 based on CDS catalog J/ApJS/210,18 file cxogbs.dat, which appears to be the combination of an Table 3 from Paper I with Table 1 from Paper II. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/clasxs
- Title:
- Chandra Large-Area Synoptic X-Ray Survey of Lockman Hole-NW
- Short Name:
- Chan/Syn/LHN
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the X-ray catalog and basic results from the wide-area, moderately deep Chandra Large Area Synoptic X-ray Survey (CLASXS) of the Lockman Hole-Northwest (LHNW) field (Yang et al. 2004), as well as the results from optical and near-infrared photometric and spectroscopic observations of these X-ray sources (Steffen et al. 2004). The nine ACIS-I fields cover a contiguous solid angle of 0.4 square degrees and reach fluxes of 5 x 10<sup>-16</sup> ergs/cm<sup>2</sup>/s (0.4 - 2 keV) and 3 x 10<sup>-15</sup> ergs/cm<sup>2</sup>/s (2 - 8 keV). (Note that fields LHNW 1-3 were observed during 2001 April 30-May 17, and that the rest of the fields were observed during 2002 April 29-May 4). This survey bridges the gap between ultra-deep pencil-beam surveys, such as the Chandra Deep Fields (CDFs), and shallower, large-area surveys, allowing a better probe of the X-ray sources that contribute most of the 2 - 10 keV cosmic X-ray background (CXB). A total of 525 X-ray point sources and four extended sources were found. There are B, V, R, I, and z' photometry for 521 (99%) of the 525 sources in the X-ray catalog and spectroscopic redshifts for 271 (52%), including 20 stars. The authors did not find evidence for redshift groupings of the X-ray sources, like those found in the Chandra Deep Field surveys, because of the larger solid angle covered by this survey. They separated the X-ray sources by optical spectral type and examined the colors, apparent and absolute magnitudes, and redshift distributions for the broad-line and non-broad-line active galactic nuclei. Combining their wide-area survey with other Chandra and XMM-Newton hard X-ray surveys, they find a definite lack of luminous, high accretion rate sources at z < 1, consistent with previous observations that showed that super-massive black hole growth is dominated at low redshifts by sources with low accretion rates. This table was created by the HEASARC in May 2005 from the merger of 3 CDS tables, corresponding to Tables 2 and 3 from Yang et al. 2005 and Table 1 of Steffen et al. (2005): <p> <pre> J/AJ/128/1501/table2.dat J/AJ/128/1501/table3.dat J/AJ/128/1483/table1.dat </pre> This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/clasxsoid
- Title:
- ChandraLarge-AreaSynopticX-RaySurveyOptical&IRCatalog
- Short Name:
- CLASXSOID
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the redshift catalog for the X-ray sources detected in the Chandra Large Area Synoptic X-ray Survey (CLASXS). The catalog for the CLASXS field includes redshifts from previous work. The authors have extended the redshift information for the full sample using photometric redshifts. The goal of the OPTX Project is to use this survey, together with the Chandra Deep Field-North (CDF-N) and the Chandra Lockman Area North Survey (CLANS), which are among the most spectroscopically complete surveys to date, to analyze the effect of spectral type on the shape and evolution of the X-ray luminosity functions and to compare the optical spectral types with the X-ray spectral properties. The CLANS and CLASXS surveys bridge the gap between the ultra-deep pencil-beam surveys, such as the Chandra Deep Fields, and the shallower, very large-area surveys. As a result, they probe the X-ray sources that contribute the bulk of the 2-8 keV X-ray background and cover the flux range of the observed break in the log N - log S distribution. This table also contains updated optical and infrared photometric catalogs for the X-ray sources in the CLASXS field. Note that for any source with both CFHT and Subaru data in the R and z' bands, the authors used the CFHT magnitude. Typical photometric uncertainties are given in Section 3.6 of the reference paper (Trouille et al. 2008). The X-ray information for the CLASXS catalog which was published in Yang et al. (2004, AJ, 128, 1501) is available as the HEASARC CLASXS table. This table was created by the HEASARC in January 2009 based on the electronic version of Table 12 from the paper which was obtained from the ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/clscat
- Title:
- Chandra Legacy Survey (CLS) Catalog
- Short Name:
- CLSCAT
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The COSMOS-Legacy survey is a 4.6-Ms Chandra program that has imaged 2.2 deg<sup>2</sup> of the COSMOS field with an effective exposure of ~160 ks over the central 1.5 deg<sup>2</sup> and of ~80 ks in the remaining area. The survey is the combination of 56 new observations obtained as an X-ray Visionary Project with the previous C-COSMOS survey. In the reference paper, the authors describe the reduction and analysis of the new observations and the properties of 2273 point sources detected above a spurious probability of 2 x 10<sup>-5</sup>. The authors also present the updated properties of the C-COSMOS sources detected in the new data. The whole survey includes 4,016 point sources (3,814, 2,920 and 2,440 in the full, soft, and hard band). The limiting depths are 2.2 x 10<sup>-16</sup>, 1.5 x 10<sup>-15</sup>, and 8.9 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the 0.5-2, 2-10, and 0.5-10 keV bands, respectively. The observed fraction of obscured active galactic nuclei with a column density > 10<sup>22</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup> from the hardness ratio (HR) is ~ 50<sup>+17</sup>_-16_%. Given the large sample, the authors compute source number counts in the hard and soft bands, significantly reducing the uncertainties of 5% - 10%. For the first time, they compute number counts for obscured (HR > -0.2) and unobscured (HR < -0.2) sources and find significant differences between the two populations in the soft band. Due to the unprecedented large exposure, the COSMOS-Legacy area is three times larger than surveys at similar depths and its depth is three times fainter than surveys covering similar areas. The area-flux region occupied by COSMOS-Legacy is likely to remain unsurpassed for years to come. The half-a-field shift tiling strategy was designed to uniformly cover the COSMOS Hubble area in depth and point-spread function (PSF) size by combining the old C-COSMOS (Elvis et al., 2009, ApJS, 184, 158) observations with the new Chandra ones (see Figure 1 in the reference paper). The main properties of the new ACIS-I Chandra COSMOS-Legacy observations are summarized in Table 1 therein. The observations took place in four blocks: 2012 November to 2013 January; 2013 March to July; 2013 October to 2014 January; and 2014 March. The mean net effective exposure time per field was 48.8 ks after all the cleaning and reduction operations. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2016 based on <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJ/819/62">CDS Catalog J/ApJ/819/62</a>, file table5.dat. Some of the values for the name parameter in the HEASARC's implementation of this table were corrected in April 2018. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/clansoid
- Title:
- ChandraLockmanAreaNorthSurvey(CLANS)Optical&IRCatalog
- Short Name:
- CLANSOID
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the redshift catalog for the X-ray sources detected in the Chandra Lockman Area North Survey (CLANS). The redshifts for the CLANS field are all new. For fluxes above 10<sup>-14</sup> ergs cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> (2-8 keV) the authors have redshifts for 76% of the sources in the CLANS, CLASXS, and CDF-N surveys. They extend the redshift information for the full sample using photometric redshifts. The goal of the OPTX Project is to use these three surveys, which are among the most spectroscopically complete surveys to date, to analyze the effect of spectral type on the shape and evolution of the X-ray luminosity functions and to compare the optical spectral types with the X-ray spectral properties. The optical and infrared photometric catalog for the CLANS X-ray sources is presented here (see the CLANS Browse table for the X-ray information). The CLANS and CLASXS surveys bridge the gap between the ultra-deep pencil-beam surveys, such as the CDFs, and the shallower, very large-area surveys. As a result, they probe the X-ray sources that contribute the bulk of the 2-8 keV X-ray background and cover the flux range of the observed break in the log N - log S distribution. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2008 based on the electronic version of Table 11 from the paper which was obtained from the ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/clans
- Title:
- Chandra Lockman Area North Survey (CLANS) X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- CLANS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the catalogs for the X-ray sources detected in the Chandra Lockman Area North Survey (CLANS). (The information on the optical and infrared counterparts to these sources is contained in the CLANSOID table.) The nine ACIS-I fields which constitute the CLANS cover a solid angle of ~0.6 deg<sup>2</sup> and reach fluxes of 7 x 10<sup>-16</sup> ergs cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> (0.5-2 keV) and 3.5 x 10<sup>-15</sup> ergs cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> (2-8 keV). The authors find a total of 761 X-ray point sources. The CLANS and CLASXS surveys bridge the gap between the ultra-deep pencil-beam surveys, such as the CDFs, and the shallower, very large-area surveys. As a result, they probe the X-ray sources that contribute the bulk of the 2-8 keV X-ray background and cover the flux range of the observed break in the log N-log S distribution. CLANS consists of nine separate 70 ks Chandra ACIS-I exposures centered at J2000.0 RA and Dec of (10 46,+59 01) (see Table 2 of the reference paper for the full observational details) which were combined to create an 0.6 deg<sup>2</sup> image containing 761 sources. The CLANS observations consist of a raster with an ~2 arcminute overlap between contiguous pointings. Following the prescription in Yang et al. (2004, AJ, 128, 1501) for the CLASXS field, the authors merged the nine individual pointing catalogs to create the final CLANS X-ray catalog. For sources with more than one detection in the nine fields, they used the detection from the observation in which the effective area of the source was the largest. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2008 based on the electronic versions of Tables 4 and 5 from the paper which were obtained from the ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/champlane
- Title:
- Chandra Multiwavelength Plane Survey Optical ID Catalog
- Short Name:
- CHAMPLANE
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The authors have carried out optical and X-ray spectral analyses on a sample of 136 candidate optical counterparts of X-ray sources found in five Galactic bulge fields included in their Chandra Multiwavelength Plane (ChaMPlane) Survey. They used a combination of optical spectral fitting and quantile X-ray analysis to obtain the hydrogen column density toward each object, and a three-dimensional dust model of the Galaxy to estimate the most probable distance in each case. They present the discovery of a population of stellar coronal emission sources, likely consisting of pre-main-sequence, young main-sequence, and main-sequence stars, as well as a component of active binaries of RS CVn or BY Dra type. They identify one candidate quiescent low-mass X-ray binary with a sub-giant companion, but note that this object may also be an RS CVn system. They report the discovery of 3 new X-ray-detected cataclysmic variables (CVs) in the direction of the Galactic center (at distances <~2 kpc). This number is in excess of predictions made with a simple CV model based on a local CV space density of <~10<sup>-5</sup> pc<sup>-3</sup>, and a scale height of ~200 pc. They discuss several possible reasons for this observed excess in their paper. This table was created by the HEASARC in October 2008 based on the version of Table 5 from the paper which was obtained from the electronic ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/champpsc
- Title:
- Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChaMPPS
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table represents the `Main Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) X-Ray Point Source Catalog' and contains the basic parameters, photometry, and fluxes of 6512 ChaMP sources in 130 Chandra observations from Chandra Cycles 1 and 2. This table lists fluxes for 2 assumed spectral energy distributions with the photon indices of Gamma=1.4 and Gamma=1.7. This catalog was distributed by the ChaMP team based on the "Chandra Multiwavelength Project: X-ray Point Source Catalog (Kim et al., 2007, ApJS, 169, 401)", and was downloaded from <a href="http://hea-www.harvard.edu/CHAMP/">http://hea-www.harvard.edu/CHAMP/</a>. If you have any comments/questions on this catalog, please contact mkim @ cfa.harvard.edu or dkim @ cfa.harvard.edu. The full Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) X-ray point source catalog lists ~ 6800 X-ray sources detected in 149 Chandra observations covering ~ 10 square degrees. The full ChaMP catalog sample is 7 times larger than the initial published ChaMP catalog (Kim et al. 2004, ApJS, 150, 19). The exposure times of the fields in this sample range from 0.9 to 124 ks, corresponding to a deepest X-ray flux limit in the 0.5 - 8.0 keV band of 9 x 10^-16 ergs cm^-2 s^-1. The ChaMP X-ray data were uniformly reduced and analyzed with ChaMP-specific pipelines and then carefully validated by visual inspection. The ChaMP catalog includes X-ray photometric data in eight different energy bands as well as X-ray spectral hardness ratios and colors, source reliability, detection probability, and positional uncertainties. The false source detection rate is ~1% of all detected ChaMP sources, while the detection probability is better than ~ 95% for sources with counts >~ 30 and off-axis angle <5'. The typical positional offset between ChaMP X-ray source and their SDSS optical counterparts is 0.7" +/- 0.4", derived from ~ 900 matched sources. This HEASARC table contains the main ChaMP catalog of 6512 X-ray point sources in 130 ChaMP fields observed once and in the overlapping fields which had the longest exposures. It does not contain the supplementary ChaMP catalog of 853 sources in 19 ChaMP overlapping fields with shorter exposure times. This table was created by the HEASARC in October 2006 based on the table <a href="http://hea-www.cfa.harvard.edu/CHAMP/IMAGES_DATA/champ_xpc.tab">http://hea-www.cfa.harvard.edu/CHAMP/IMAGES_DATA/champ_xpc.tab</a> on the ChaMP website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chpngptsrc
- Title:
- Chandra Nearby Galaxies Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChanNGalPSC
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The authors have analyzed Chandra ACIS observations of 32 nearby spiral and elliptical galaxies. The properties (e.g., counts in 3 energy bands, hardness ratios and inferred X-ray luminosities) of the 1441 X-ray point sources that were detected in these galaxies are listed in this table. The total point-source X-ray (0.3 - 8.0 keV) luminosity L<sub>XP</sub> is found to be well correlated with the B-band, K-band, and FIR+UV luminosities of spiral host galaxies, and is well correlated with the B-band and K-band luminosities of elliptical galaxies. This suggests an intimate connection between L<sub>XP</sub> and both the old and the young stellar populations, for which K and FIR+UV luminosities are reasonable proxies for the galaxy mass and the star formation rate (SFR). This table was created by the HEASARC in October 2006 based on CDS table J/ApJ/602/231/tablea1.dat This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/channsgpsc
- Title:
- Chandra Nearby Spiral Galaxies Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChanNSPiral
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- Emission from discrete point sources dominates the X-ray luminosity in spiral galaxies. This table contains the results from a survey of 11 nearby, nearly face-on spiral galaxies observed with the Chandra X-ray Observatory in 22 observations for a total of 869 ks. The galaxies in this sample are at high Galactic latitude to minimize the absorbing column in the line of site, are nearby to minimize source confusion, and span the Hubble sequence for spirals (types 0-7), allowing insights into the X-ray source population of many diverse systems. More than 820 unique point sources are detected in at least one observation within the D25 ellipses of the galaxies. A minimum of 27% of the sources exhibit detectable long- or short-term variability, indicating a source population dominated by accreting XRBs. 17 ultraluminous X-ray sources are detected, with typical rates per galaxy of 1 or 2. In this table, source lists for the 11 galaxies are presented, along with source counts, fluxes, luminosities, X-ray colors, and variability properties. It should be noted that the X-ray source counts presented in this table are raw, background-subtracted counts, so the count rates in sources from the same galaxy that fall on different CCDs cannot be directly compared. The colors presented have been corrected for the differences between front-illuminated and back-illuminated CCDs. This table was created by the HEASARC in November 2006 based on the electronic version of Table 4 obtained from the electronic ApJ web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/chanmaster
- Title:
- Chandra Observations
- Short Name:
- Chandra
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This database table contains all of the observations made by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (CXO, formerly known as the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility or AXAF) as part of the Performance Verification and Calibration (PVC) phase and also contains all of the subsequent Cycles' Guaranteed Time Observers (GTO) and General Observer (GO) targets, and any Director's Discretionary Time (DDT) targets that have been observed. It also includes scheduled and as-yet-not-scheduled targets. The HEASARC updates this database table on a twice-weekly basis by querying the database table at the Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC) website, as discussed in the Provenance section. For observations whose status is 'archived', data products can be retrieved from the HEASARC's mirror of the CXC's Chandra Data Archive (CDA). The CXC should be acknowledged as the source of Chandra data. The PVC phase was during the first few months of the CXO mission; some of the calibration observations that are for monitoring purposes will be performed in later mission cycles. All calibration data (entries with Type = CAL in this database) are placed immediately into the CXO public data archive at the Chandra X-Ray Observatory Center (CXC); please see the Web page at <a href="http://asc.harvard.edu/">http://asc.harvard.edu/</a> for more information on the CXC data archive). GTO observations during Cycle 1 or any subsequent Cycle will probably occupy 100% of months 3-4, 30% of months 5-22, and 15% of the available time for the remainder of the mission. Guaranteed Time Observers will have the same proprietary data rights as General Observers (i.e., their data will be placed in the public CXC archive 12 months after they have received the data in usable form). For detailed information on the Chandra Observatory and datasets see: <pre> <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/</a> for general Chandra information <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/cda/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/cda/</a> for the Chandra Data Archive <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/cal/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/cal/</a> for calibration information <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/caldb/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/caldb/</a> for the calibration database <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/</a> for data analysis <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/download/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/download/</a> for analysis software <a href="http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/threads/">http://cxc.harvard.edu/ciao/threads/</a> for analysis threads <a href="http://cda.harvard.edu/chaser/">http://cda.harvard.edu/chaser/</a> for WebChaSeR </pre> The HEASARC updates this database table on a twice-weekly basis based on information obtained from the Chandra Data Archive at the CXC website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/coup
- Title:
- Chandra Orion Ultradeep Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- ChandraOUP
- Date:
- 26 Apr 2024
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project (COUP) was a deep observation of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) that was obtained with the Chandra X-Ray Observatory's Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS). This Browse table contains the COUP catalog of more than 1600 X-ray point sources that were detected in the exceptionally deep 2003 January observation, which was an 838 ks exposure made over a continuous period of 13.2 days. The COUP observation provides the most uniform and comprehensive data set on the X-ray emission of normal stars ever obtained in the history of X-ray astronomy. This table was created by the HEASARC in September 2006 based on the <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/ApJS/160/319">CDS catalog J/ApJS/160/319</a>, tables 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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