- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/swxcscat
- Title:
- Swift X-Ray Telescope Cluster Survey Catalog
- Short Name:
- SWXCSCAT
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Swift X-ray Cluster Survey (SWXCS) catalog obtained using archival data from the X-ray telescope (XRT) on board the Swift satellite acquired from 2005 February to 2012 November, extending the first release of the SWXCS. The catalog provides positions and soft X-ray fluxes for a flux-limited sample of X-ray group and cluster candidates. In Table 3 of the reference paper (available at the HEASARC as the linked table SWXCSOXID), when possible, optical counterparts are given for these candidates. The authors consider the fields with Galactic latitude |b| > 20 degrees so as to avoid regions of high H I column density. They discard all of the observations targeted at groups or clusters of galaxies, as well as particular extragalactic fields not suitable for searching for faint extended sources. The authors finally select ~ 3000 useful fields covering a total solid angle of ~ 400 deg<sup>2</sup>. They identify extended source candidates in the soft-band (0.5-2 keV) images of these fields using the software EXSdetect, which is specifically calibrated for the XRT data. Extensive simulations are used to evaluate contamination and completeness as a function of the source signal, allowing the authors to minimize the number of spurious detections and to robustly assess the selection function. The final catalog includes 263 candidate galaxy clusters and groups down to a flux limit of 7 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the soft band (0.5 - 2.0 keV), and the log N - log S is in very good agreement with previous deep X-ray surveys. In the reference paper, the final list of sources is cross-correlated with published optical, X-ray, and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich catalogs of clusters. The authors find that 137 sources have been previously identified as clusters in the literature in independent surveys, while 126 are new detections. Currently, they have collected redshift information for 158 sources (60% of the entire sample). From the entire Swift XRT archive in the period 2005 February-2012 November, the authors have selected all the fields that can be used to build an unbiased, serendipitous X-ray cluster catalog. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2015 based on an electronic version of Table 2 from the reference paper which was obtained from the CDS as their catalog J/ApJS/216/28 file table2.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/swxcsoxid
- Title:
- Swift X-Ray Telescope Cluster Survey Cross-Correlation Catalog
- Short Name:
- SWXCSOXID
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the Swift X-ray Cluster Survey (SWXCS) table of cross-correlations of the X-ray galaxy cluster and group candidates with optical, X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich catalogs and optical follow-up. The SWXCS list of cluster candidates was obtained using archival data from the X-ray telescope (XRT) on board the Swift satellite acquired from 2005 February to 2012 November, extending the first release of the SWXCS. The main catalog (available at the HEASARC as the linked table SWXCSCAT) provides positions and soft X-ray fluxes for a flux-limited sample of X-ray group and cluster candidates. The table herein (based on Table 3 of the reference paper) contains when possible, optical and other counterparts for these candidates. The authors consider the fields with Galactic latitude |b| > 20 degrees so as to avoid regions of high H I column density. They discard all of the observations targeted at groups or clusters of galaxies, as well as particular extragalactic fields not suitable for searching for faint extended sources. The authors finally select ~ 3000 useful fields covering a total solid angle of ~ 400 deg<sup>2</sup>. They identify extended source candidates in the soft-band (0.5-2 keV) images of these fields using the software EXSdetect, which is specifically calibrated for the XRT data. Extensive simulations are used to evaluate contamination and completeness as a function of the source signal, allowing the authors to minimize the number of spurious detections and to robustly assess the selection function. The final catalog includes 263 candidate galaxy clusters and groups down to a flux limit of 7 x 10<sup>-15</sup> erg/cm<sup>2</sup>/s in the soft band (0.5 - 2.0 keV), and the log N - log S is in very good agreement with previous deep X-ray surveys. In the reference paper, the final list of sources is cross-correlated with published optical, X-ray, and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich catalogs of clusters. The authors find that 137 sources have been previously identified as clusters in the literature in independent surveys, while 126 are new detections. Currently, they have collected redshift information for 158 sources (60% of the entire sample). The authors checked for counterparts in previous X-ray cluster surveys, in optical cluster surveys, and in the Planck SZ cluster survey. They simply assume a search radius of 2 arcminutes from the X-ray centroid, which has been shown to be an efficient criterion in Paper I. Nevertheless, they also inspected the area within 5 arcminutes from the X-ray centroid in order to investigate whether some possible identification is found at radii larger than 2 arcminutes. Counterparts at distances between 2 and 5 arcminutes are included when the optical or SZ corresponding source has a large uncertainty in its position. This is often the case for optical, sparse clusters, or for SZ cluster candidates. The authors list all of the counterparts associated with the SWXCS sources herein, and they include the measured redshift when available. In case of multiple counterparts, they list all of them. Except for a few cases where there are multiple counterparts with statistically inconsistent redshifts, the authors keep the counterpart with the smallest angular distance from the X-ray center. From optical surveys, the authors found 233 optical counterparts corresponding to 116 SWXCS sources. From X-ray surveys, they found 70 X-ray counterparts classified as clusters, corresponding to 36 SWXCS sources. Finally, for 15 SWXCS sources, they found 16 cluster counterparts detected via the SZ effect, 13 by Planck and 3 by the South Pole Telescope (SPT). The Planck sources are typically at larger distances from the X-ray centroid (between 1 and 3 arcminutes) because of the much larger position errors of Planck clusters. Overall, about half (137) of the 263 SWXCS sources were previously identified as groups or clusters of galaxies, while 126 SWXCS sources are new cluster and group candidates. The authors have collected spectroscopic or photometric redshifts for 130 of their sources. Moreover, to increase the number of available redshifts, they also searched in NED catalogs for single galaxies with published redshifts not associated with previously known clusters within a search radius of 7 arcseconds from the X-ray centroid of their sources. They find 50 galaxies with measured redshifts for 47 of their sources as a complement to the redshifts obtained from cluster counterparts. In 35 cases where the authors have both cluster and galaxy counterparts, the galaxy redshifts are consistent with those of clusters. In the 12 cases where no cluster counterpart is found, the authors tentatively assign the galaxy redshift to their X-ray source. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2015 based on an electronic version of Table 3 from the reference paper which was obtained from the CDS as their catalog J/ApJS/216/28 file table3.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/swxrt1fgl
- Title:
- Swift XRT Counterparts to Unidentified 1FGL Sources
- Short Name:
- SWXRT1FGL
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The authors have analyzed all the archival X-ray data of 134 unidentified (unID) gamma-ray sources listed in the first Fermi/LAT (1FGL) catalog and subsequently followed up by the Swift/XRT. They constructed the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from radio to gamma-rays for each X-ray source detected, and tried to pick up unique objects that display anomalous spectral signatures. In these analyses, they target all the 1FGL unID sources, using updated data from the second Fermi/LAT (2FGL) catalog on the Large Area Telescope (LAT) position and spectra. In the reference paper, the authors discuss the X-ray identification results and the SEDs of all 134 sources observed with the Swift/XRT. The selection criteria for the Fermi sources were as follows: (1) categorized as unID sources in the 1FGL catalog, (2) localized at high Galactic latitude |b| > 10 degrees, (3) observational data were made public by October 2011, and (4) the positional center of the Swift FoV is within 12 arcminutes of the 1FGL sources. Among 630 unID sources listed in the 1FGL catalog, this selection yielded 134 sources which were analyzed in this study. This table contains the list of the positions and 0.3-10 keV count rates of 267 Swift XRT sources which were detected with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 3 or more within the Swift/XRT field of views (FoV) of 112 of the 134 1FGL unID gamma-ray sources, with 22 of the 1FGL sources having no detected Swift XRT sources in their FoVs. The Swift XRT images of all 134 unID gamma-ray sources, the positions of the significant XRT sources, and the 95% 1FGL and 2FGL error ellipses are shown in Figure 11 of the reference paper. This table was created by the HEASARC in September 2014 based on an electronic version of Table 4 from the reference paper which was 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/swift2sxps
- Title:
- Swift-XRT Point Source Catalog (2SXPS)
- Short Name:
- SWIFT2SXPS
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the second Swift X-ray Point Source (2SXPS) catalog of detections by the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) used in Photon Counting (PC) mode in the 0.3-10 keV energy range. Swift is a NASA mission with international participation dedicated to the gamma-ray burst study. It carries three instruments. The BAT is the large field-of-view instrument and operates in the 10-300 keV energy band; and two narrow field instruments, XRT and UVOT, that operate in the X-ray and UV/optical regime, respectively. The overall 2SXPS catalog characteristics are as follows: <pre> Data included 2005 Jan 01 - 2018 August 01 Sky coverage 3,790 square degrees Typical Sensitivity (0.3-10 keV) 2x10<sup>-13</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> (observations) 4x10<sup>-14</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> (stacked images) Typical position error 5.6" (90% confidence radius, including systematics) Detections 1,091,058 Unique sources 206,335 Variable sources 82,324 Uncatalogued sources 78,100 False positive rate Flag=Good 0.3% Flag=Good/Reasonable 1% Flag=Good/Reasonable/Poor <10% </pre> This catalog enhances the 1SXPS catalogue (Evans, P. A., et al. 2014, ApJS, 210, 8) in different ways. The 2SXPS catalog uses an improved Point Spread Function (PSF) and pile-up models, a better source detection pipeline that includes a technique to model the effects of stray light, and tests to automatically avoid diffuse emission and ~six years more data. The results are that the 2SXPS catalog contains 50% more temporal coverage than 1SXPS, a sky coverage of 3790 square deg almost double compare to the 1SXPS (1905 square Degree) and ~30% more sources compared to the 1SXPS. The Swift XRT observations were filtered to remove times when: a) data were contaminated by scattered light from the daylight side of the Earth; b) the on-board astrometry derived from the images obtained by the Swift UV/Optical telescope was unreliable; and c) observations with less than 100s of PC mode. The 127519 observations included in the catalog provide a total usable exposure is 266.5 Ms. A Swift observation is a collection of snapshots and the source detection algorithm was run on individual observation as well as on stacked images. The latter were generated on a grid of 2,300x2,300 pixels (~ 90'x90') to ensure that every overlap between observations is in at least one stacked image. A total of 14628 stacked images were generated. Each record corresponds to a unique source which characteristics are described with 230 parameters. The catalog reports for each source rates in four energy band (0.3-10.keV, 0.3-1. keV, 1-2 keV and 3-10 keV), background rates, variability for each energy band, two hardness ratio, peak rate and several spectral parameters. The hardness ratios are defined as follows: <pre> HR1 = (M-S)/(M+S) where M and S are the medium (1-2 keV) and soft (0.3-1 keV) band count rates HR2 = (H-M)/(H+M) where H and M are the hard (2-10 keV) and medium (1-2 keV) band count rates </pre> and they are calculated using all observations. The peak rate is determined using three different timescale: the count rate considering all the observations (see parameters rates in this database), the count rate in each observation (not reported in this database) and the count rate in each snapshot (not reported in this database). The peak rate is the rate +/- error from the timescale which has the highest 1-sigma lower-limit on the count rate. Spectral parameters and source flux are estimated using three different methods for two spectral models, a power-law and APEC (see Smith et al., 2001, ApJL, 556, L91). Not all sources have values for all three methods. The parameters starting with "fix" are defined for every source and uses fixed spectral model parameters: a photon index of 1.7 for a power-law model, a temperature of kT=1keV for the APEC model and for both models uses the Galactic absorption listed in the parameter "nh". The parameters starting "intr" have been inferred from the hardness ratio. Look-up tables containing (HR1, HR2, NH, photon index) and (HR1, HR2, NH, kT) are pre-calculated for the power-law and APEC models. If the source HR1 and HR2 are close to the values in the table, spectral parameters are derived by interpolating the HR1 and HR2 in the look-up tables that are close to the HR1 and HR2 of the source. The parameters starting with "fit" have been derived from fitting an actual source spectrum in XSPEC and they are only available for the brightest sources (>50 net counts, and at least one detection in a single observation). The parameters fields starting with "pow" and "apec" report the values from the 'best' of these methods. The parameters "which_pow" and "which_apec" indicates which of the three methods are reported. The catalog also includes flags derived from the cross-correlated with other source catalogs. The catalogs and their reference sources are as follows: <pre> * AllWISE: <a href="https://wise2.ipac.caltech.edu/docs/release/allwise/">https://wise2.ipac.caltech.edu/docs/release/allwise/</a> * ROSAT HRI: <a href="https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/rosat/rra/RRA.html">https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/rosat/rra/RRA.html</a> * SDSS Quasar Catalog DR14: Paris et al., 2018, A&A, 613, 51 (<a href="https://www.sdss.org/dr14/algorithms/qso_catalog/">https://www.sdss.org/dr14/algorithms/qso_catalog/</a>) * 2MASS: Skrutskie et al., 2006, AJ, 131, 1163 * 2CSC: accessed via the CSCView Tool at <a href="https://cxc.harvard.edu/csc/about.html">https://cxc.harvard.edu/csc/about.html</a> (1CSC paper: Evans et al., 2010, ApJS, 189, 37) * 1SWXRT: Evans et al., 2014, ApJS, 210,8 * 1SXPS: D'Elia et al., 2013, A&A, 551, 142 * 2RXS: Boller et al., 2016, A&A, 588, 103 * 3XMM-DR8: <a href="http://xmmssc.irap.omp.eu/Catalogue/3XMM-DR8/3XMM_DR8.html">http://xmmssc.irap.omp.eu/Catalogue/3XMM-DR8/3XMM_DR8.html</a> (3XMM paper: Rosen, Webb, Watson et al., 2016, A&A, 590, 1) * 3XMM Stack: Traulsen et al., 2019, A&A, 642, 77 * SwiftFT: Puccetti et al. 2011, A&A,528, A122 * XMM SL2: Saxton et al., 2008, A&A 480, 611 * XRTGRB: Evans et al, 2009, MNRAS, 397, 1177 (<a href="https://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_positions">https://www.swift.ac.uk/xrt_positions</a>) * USNOB1: Monet et al., 2003, AJ, 125, 984 </pre> The 2SXPS paper (Evans et al. 2020 ApJS, 247,54) describes in detail the methodology of stacking images, background modeling, point spread function mapping, stray light detection and corrections, data filtering techniques and processing. The 2SXPS catalog has a dedicated website at <a href="https://www.swift.ac.uk/2SXPS">https://www.swift.ac.uk/2SXPS</a>. This database table was created by the HEASARC in November 20201 based on the electronic version delivered to the HEASARC by the Leicester University. The catalog has a dedicated website at <a href="https://www.swift.ac.uk/2SXPS">https://www.swift.ac.uk/2SXPS</a>. The version available from the HEASARC corresponds to the catalog designated as "All" on the Leicester website. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/swirelhcxo
- Title:
- SWIRE/Chandra Lockman Hole Field X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- SWIRELHCXO
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The authors have carried out a moderate-depth (70 ks), contiguous 0.7 square degrees Chandra survey in the Lockman Hole Field of the Spitzer/SWIRE Legacy Survey coincident with a completed, ultra-deep VLA survey with deep optical and near-infrared imaging in-hand. The primary motivation is to distinguish starburst galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGNs), including the significant, highly obscured (log N<sub>H</sub> > 23 cm<sup>-2</sup>) subset. Chandra has detected 775 X-ray sources to a limiting broadband (0.3 - 8 keV) flux of ~4 x 10<sup>-16</sup> erg cm<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>. This table contains the X-ray catalog, fluxes, hardness ratios, and multi-wavelength fluxes. The log N versus log S agrees with those of previous surveys covering similar flux ranges. The Chandra and Spitzer flux limits are well matched: 771 (99%) of the X-ray sources have infrared (IR) or optical counterparts, and 333 have MIPS 24-micron detections. There are four optical-only X-ray sources and four with no visible optical/IR counterpart. The very deep (~2.7 microJansky rms) VLA data yield 251 (> 4 sigma) radio counterparts, 44% of the X-ray sources in the field. The authors confirm that the tendency for lower X-ray flux sources to be harder is primarily due to absorption. As expected, there is no correlation between observed IR and X-ray fluxes. Optically bright, type 1, and red AGNs lie in distinct regions of the IR versus X-ray flux plots, demonstrating the wide range of spectral energy distributions in this sample and providing the potential for classification/source selection. Many optically bright sources, which lie outside the AGN region in the optical versus X-ray plots (f<sub>r</sub>/f<sub>x</sub> > 10), lie inside the region predicted for red AGNs in IR versus X-ray plots, consistent with the presence of an active nucleus. More than 40% of the X-ray sources in the VLA field are radio-loud using the classical definition of R<sub>L</sub>. The majority of these are red and relatively faint in the optical so that the use of R<sub>L</sub> to select those AGNs with the strongest radio emission becomes questionable. Using the 24-micron to radio flux ratio (q<sub>24</sub>) instead results in 13 of the 147 AGNs with sufficient data being classified as radio-loud, in good agreement with the ~10% expected for broad-lined AGNs based on optical surveys. The authors conclude that q<sub>24</sub> is a more reliable indicator of radio-loudness. Use of R<sub>L</sub> should be confined to the optically selected type 1 AGN. This table was created by the HEASARC in December 2009 based on the machine-readable versions of Tables 3, 4 and 7 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/sumss
- Title:
- Sydney University Molonglo Sky Survey (SUMSS) Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- SUMSS
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Sydney University Molonglo Sky Survey (SUMSS) is a radio imaging survey of the sky south of declination, delta = -30 degrees (a total area of 8100 square degrees) carried out with the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope (MOST) operating at 843 MHz. The survey consists of 629 4.3 degrees by 4.3 degrees mosaic images with a resolution of 45" by 45" x cosec delta, and a limiting peak brightness of 6 mJy/beam at declinations delta <= 50 degrees, and 10 mJy/beam at delta > 50 degrees. The SUMSS is therefore similar in sensitivity and resolution to the northern NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS). This table based on the latest version of the SUMSS Source Catalog of radio sources (which uses all of the released mosaics). Sources were found by fitting two-dimensional Gaussians to SUMSS mosaics. Positions in the catalog are accurate to within 1-2" for sources with peak brightness >= 20 mJy/beam, and are always better than 10". The internal flux density scale is accurate to within 3%. Image artifacts were classified using a decision tree, which correctly identified and rejected spurious sources in over 96% of cases. Analysis of the catalog shows that it is highly uniform and is complete to 8 mJy at delta <= -50 degrees, and to 18 mJy at delta > -50 degrees. This HEASARC table was initially created in August 2005. It is updated automatically within a week of any detected change to the SUMSS Source Catalog as obtained from the SUMSS Website at the following URL: <pre> <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20241228020055/">https://web.archive.org/web/20241228020055/</a><a href="http://www.astrop.physics.usyd.edu.au/sumsscat/update">http://www.astrop.physics.usyd.edu.au/sumsscat/update</a> </pre> This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/taurusxmm
- Title:
- Taurus Molecular Cloud XMM-Newton X-Ray Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- TAURUSXMM
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the Taurus Molecular Cloud (XEST) surveys the most populated ~5 square degrees of the Taurus Molecular Cloud, using the XMM-Newton X-ray observatory to study the thermal structure, variability, and long-term evolution of hot plasma, to investigate the magnetic dynamo, and to search for new potential members of the association. The authors present overall correlations with fundamental stellar parameters that were derived from the previous literature. The present overview paper introduces the project and provides the basic results from the X-ray analysis of all sources detected in the XEST survey. Comprehensive tables in the published paper summarize the stellar properties of all the targets surveyed. The survey goes deeper than previous X-ray surveys of Taurus by about an order of magnitude and for the first time systematically accesses very faint and strongly absorbed TMC objects. The authors find a detection rate of 85% and 98% for classical and weak-line T Tauri stars (CTTS and WTTS), respectively, and identify about half of the surveyed protostars and brown dwarfs. Overall, 136 out of 169 surveyed stellar systems were detected. The authors describe an X-ray luminosity vs. mass correlation, discuss the distribution of X-ray-to-bolometric luminosity ratios, and show evidence for lower X-ray luminosities in CTTS compared to WTTS. The complete catalog of all X-ray sources (stellar and non-stellar) detected in the 28 XEST fields is presented in this table. The catalog provides X-ray coordinates, their uncertainties, X-ray count rates and their uncertainties, and X-ray hardness ratios for 2347 detected X-ray sources. If two XEST fields overlap, the same sources may have been identified twice, with different XEST IDs assigned, notice. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2007 based on the <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/A+A/468/353">CDS Catalog J/A+A/468/353</a> file table14.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/td1
- Title:
- TD1 Stellar Ultraviolet Fluxes Catalog
- Short Name:
- TD1
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- The Belgian/UK Ultraviolet Sky Survey Telescope (S2/68) in the ESRO TD1 satellite carried out a controlled scan of the entire sky. It measured the absolute ultraviolet flux distribution between 2740A and 1350A of point sources down to 10th visual magnitude for unreddened early B stars. The S2/68 experiment has been described by Boksenberg et al. (1973MNRAS.163..291B), and the absolute calibration by Humphries et al. (1976A&A....49..389H). The TD1 Catalog of Stellar Ultraviolet Fluxes represents results from the sky-scan experiment on the TD1 satellite of the European Space Research Organization (ESRO), now part of ESA. It lists the absolute fluxes, in four passbands, for 31,215 stars: <pre> Passband Center: 274.0nm 236.5nm 196.5nm 156.5nm Effective Width: 31.0nm 33.0nm 33.0nm 33.0nm </pre> The stars have been selected subject to the constraint that the signal-to-noise ratio should be at least 10.0 in any one of the four passbands. Null values of a flux field and an error field indicate there are no valid data for the star. This usually arises with close pairs of stars whose spectra overlap. Five standard flux error values are greater than 99.99, and were too large for the format of the flux field in the original table. Thus, the flux error values which were greater than 99.99 are given as 99.99. Many of the fainter stars of spectral type later than A5 do not have significant signals in all of the spectrophotometric channels (particularly the 1565A channel). Consequently, after the removal of the background, they can randomly give rise to small negative values of flux. Those negative values were not suppressed, but are given together with their error, as they can be significant when considered as part of a statistical sample. Although the sky coverage is essentially complete, the catalog does not contain the fluxes for all stars that fall within the limit of the sensitivity of the instrument. If any star expected to be present is missing, then its signal is probably blended with that of a nearby star, in which case the data have been discarded. The original contents of the HEASARC's TD1 database table came from a magnetic tape sent to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center by Dr. G.I. Thompson of the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh, Scotland. The HEASARC recreated this database table in August 2005, based on the <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/II/59B">CDS Catalog II/59B</a> file catalog.dat.gz, in an effort to modernize its parameter names and documentation, as well as to add Galactic coordinates. The data in the CDS version originally came from "Selected Astronomical Catalogs" Vol. 1 CD-ROM released by the NASA Astronomical Data Center (ADC) in 1991. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/texas
- Title:
- Texas Survey of Radio Sources at 365 MHz
- Short Name:
- Texas
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This catalog is from the Texas Survey of discrete radio sources between -35.5 degrees and +71.5 degrees declination (B1950), which was carried out at a frequency of 365 MHz (82 cm wavelength) with the Texas Interferometer during the period from 1974 to 1983. The Survey lists accurate positions with internal errors of about an arcsecond, flux densities (which for strong point sources have internal errors of about 1% and total errors of about 5%), simple structure models and indications of spectrum and variability for 66841 sources. Results of comparisons with other data show that the Survey is 90% complete at 0.4 Jy and 80% complete at 0.25 Jy, is nearly free from spurious sources, and has a lobeshift incidence which is reasonably described by quality flags associated with each source. The University of Texas Radio Astronomy Observatory (UTRAO) carried out, with the Texas Interferometer, this 365 MHz survey of the sky, which was intended to be complete to a flux density level of 0.25 Jy, to provide positions with an accuracy of about 1 arcsec in both coordinates, to give accurate flux densities and indication of source variability, and to give rough structure models for each source. The observations began in 1974 and were completed in 1983. A preliminary version of one declination strip was published (Douglas et al., Publ. Dept. Astron. Univ. Texas, No. 17, Oct. 1980), and a number of intermediate versions of the survey were privately circulated for various purposes, pending completion of the final analysis and adjustment of the data. This database was created by the HEASARC in February 2001, based on CDS/ADC catalog VIII/42. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
- ID:
- ivo://nasa.heasarc/swif1swxrt
- Title:
- The Seven-Year Swift-XRT Point Source Catalog (1SWXRT)
- Short Name:
- SWIF1SWXRT
- Date:
- 07 Mar 2025
- Publisher:
- NASA/GSFC HEASARC
- Description:
- This table contains the 1SWXRT catalog of point sources detected by X-ray Telescope (XRT) on board of the Swift satellite during the first seven years of operation (Jan 2005 - Dec 2011). Swift is a NASA mission with international participation dedicated to gamma-ray burst study. It carries three instruments. The BAT is the large field of view instrument and operates in the 10-300 keV energy band; and two narrow field instruments, XRT and UVOT, that operate in the X-ray and UV/optical regime, respectively. The seven-year Swift-XRT point source catalog (1SWXRT) was built using all the observations performed by Swift-XRT in PC observing mode with an exposure longer than 500 s. The total number of observations considered is 35011, for an overall exposure time of ~140 Ms. Different observations with same pointing were not merged, but analyzed separately, thus retaining information about the variability of the catalogued sources. Most of the observations have short exposures. In fact, ~18% have t<sub>exp</sub> < 1 ks and ~77% have t<sub>exp</sub> < 5 ks. Only 7% of the observations have an exposure time > 10 ks, which are mostly (but not exclusively) fields associated with GRBs. The catalog was generated by running the detection algorithm in the XIMAGE package version 4.4.1 that locates the point sources using a sliding-cell method. The average background intensity is estimated in several small square boxes uniformly located within the image. The position and intensity of each detected source are calculated in a box whose size maximizes the signal-to-noise ratio. For each detection the catalog reports three count rates in the 0.3-3 (Soft), and 2-10 (Hard), and 0.3-10 (Full) keV energy bands. Each are corrected for dead times and vignetting using exposure maps and for the PSF. Hardness ratios are calculated using the three energy band and defined as HR = (c<sub>H</sub> - c<sub>S</sub>)/(c<sub>H</sub> + c<sub>S</sub>) where c<sub>S</sub> and c<sub>H</sub> are the count rates in the S(oft) and H(ard) bands, respectively. The catalog was cleaned from spurious and extended sources by visual inspection of all the observations. Count rates in the three bands were converted to 0.5-10, 0.5-2, and 2-10 keV observed fluxes, respectively. For the fluxes these energy bands were adopted to easy comparison with other X-ray catalogs (Watson, M. G. et al. 2009, A&A, 493, 339; Evans, I. N. et al. 2010, ApJ, 189, 37). The count rate to flux conversion was made using an absorbed power-law. The absorption is the Galactic hydrogen column density in the direction of the source and the photon spectral index has been estimated through the hardness ratio. Each row in the catalog is a detection not a unique source since the analysis was done by observation. Since multiple observations have covered the same part of the sky, a source may be detected more than once. The total number of detections is 84979 with an estimated 36000 unique sources as reported in the D'Elia et al. paper. The number of unique sources is derived by considering as one source all detections that have their positions within 12 arcsec. However, the catalog does not have a marker to identify all detections of a unique source. This database table was created by the HEASARC in November 2021 based on the electronic version available from the ASI Data Center <a href="https://www.asdc.asi.it/1swxrt/">https://www.asdc.asi.it/1swxrt/</a> and published in the Astronomy and Astrophysics Journal. This catalog is also available as <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/A+A/551/A142">CDS catalog J/A+A/551/A142</a>. The HEASARC added the id_number parameter, a counter to numerically identify each detection in the catalog (since the names of the detections are not unique), . Note that there is a discrepancy in the number of detections in the electronic version which has 84979 records and the number of detections reported in the paper (84992). This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .