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3rd Ariel-V SSI Catalog
The 3rd Ariel-V SSI Catalog contains a list of X-ray sources detected by the University of Leicester's Sky Survey Instrument (SSI) on the Ariel-V satellite, and published (in 2 papers) as the Ariel-V (3A) Catalog: Warwick et al. 1981, MNRAS, 197, 865 (the low galactic latitude sources) and McHardy et al. 1981, MNRAS, 197, 893 (the high galactic latitude sources). The catalog is based on observations extending over a 5.5 year period from 1974 October until 1980 March. The SSI had a field of view of 0.75 by 10.6 degrees (FWHM) and had an energy range from 2 to 18 keV. A detailed description of the SSI is given by Villa et al. 1976, MNRAS, 176, 609. For a more detailed discussion of how the 3A Catalog was created, please refer to the Warwick et al. (1981) and McHardy et al. (1981) papers. This online catalog was created by the HEASARC in March 2003 based on the merger of two original tables originally obtained from the ADC website (<a href="https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/FTP/heasarc/dbase/misc_files/ariel3a/hilat.dat">https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/FTP/heasarc/dbase/misc_files/ariel3a/hilat.dat</a> and <a href="https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/FTP/heasarc/dbase/misc_files/ariel3a/lowlat.dat">https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/FTP/heasarc/dbase/misc_files/ariel3a/lowlat.dat</a>). This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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ROSAT PSPC Catalog of SMC X-Ray Sources (Haberl et al.)
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MAXI/GSC 7-Year High and Low Galactic Latitude Source Catalog (3MAXI)
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This table combines the published X-ray source catalogs of the high galactic latitude (|b| > 10o), Kawamuro et 2018, and the low galactic latitude (|b| < 10o), Hori et al. 2018, based on 7 years of MAXI Gas Slit Camera (GSC) data from 2009 August 13 to 2016 July 31. The low galactic latitude catalog contains 221 sources with a significance threshold > 6.5 sigma. The low galactic faintest source has a flux of 5.2 x 10-12 erg cm-2 s-1 (or an intensity of 0.43 mCrab) in the 4-10 keV band. The high galactic latitude catalog contains 686 sources detected at significances >= 6.5 sigma in the 4-10 keV band. The high galactic 4-10 keV sensitivity reaches ~0.48 mCrab, or ~5.9 x 10-12 erg cm-2 s-1, over half of the survey area. The same data-screening criteria were applied to obtain the low and high galactic catalogs. In their papers the authors describe the detection method, the statistical quantities derived for each source and their variability. To derive a counterpart, each source was cross-matched with the Swift/BAT 105-month catalog (BAT105; Oh et al. 2018), the Uhuru fourth catalog (4U; Forman et al. 1978), the RXTE All-Sky Monitor long-term observed source table (XTEASMLONG16), Meta-Catalog of X-Ray Detected Clusters of Galaxies (MCXC; Piffaretti et al. 2011), the XMM-Newton Slew Survey Catalog (XMMSL217), and the ROSAT All-Sky Survey Bright Source Catalog (1RXS; Voges et al. 1999). Seven of the sources in the low galactic latitudes were detected by binning the data differently (source numbers 215-221 in the catalog named 73-day sources), and, similarly, four of the sources in the high galactic latitude catalog named transient sources. The parameters in the combined table include the source name (3MAXI), the position and its error, the detection significances and fluxes in the 4-10 keV, 3-4 keV bands and 10-20 keV bands the hardness ratios (HR1: 3-4 keV, 4-10 keV and HR2: 4-10 keV, 10-20 keV), excess variance in the 4-10 keV lightcurve and information on the likely counterpart. The high galactic catalogs also reports the flux in the 3-10 keV, an additional hardness (HR3: 3-10 keV and 10-20 keV) and an additional parameter representing variability. The hardness ratios are defined as H-S/H+S were S and H are the soft- and hard-band fluxes, respectively. This table was created by the HEASARC in April 2021. It is a combination of the 7-year low- and high-latitude MAXI source catalogs published on ApJS. The data for the low-galactic latitude and the high-galactic latitude were downloaded from the ApJS electronic version of the Hori et al. 2018 ApJS 235,7 and Kawamuro et al. 2018 ApJS 238,33 papers respectively. The low-latitude data included in this table are from tables 4, 5, 6, 7 of the Hori paper that report the X-ray sources detected (214 sources, table 4), their possible identification (table 5), the transient sources discovered binning the data on 73 days period (7 sources, table 5) and their identification (table 6). The high-latitude data included in this table are from the tables 1,2,3 of the Kawamuro paper that report the X-ray sources detected (682 sources in table 1), their identifications (table 2), and the transient sources (4 sources in table 3). The low and high galactic latitude source catalogs provide for each individual source similar parameters for the X-ray properties with the high-latitude having three additional parameters, specifically, the flux in the 3-10 keV energy range, the 3-10/10-20-keV hardness ratio, and a time variability test. These parameters are kept in the HEASARC combined table and set to "blank" values for the low-latitude sources. The four sources in the high-latitude catalog named transient sources have only fluxes in the 4-10 keV band and no other fluxes in the other energy bands or the hardness ratio are reported. The HEASARC combined table includes a field to identify whether the source is from the
EXOSAT/ME Galactic Plane Survey
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This catalog is based on information contained in Warwick et al (1988), MNRAS, 232, 551. The distribution of 2-6 keV x-ray emission in the galactic plane in the first and fourth galactic quadrants has been measured in a series of scanning observations with the medium-energy progportional counters on EXOSAT. The results are presented as contour maps and in the form of a catalogue of 70 discrete sources. Additional references can be found under the reference parameter. Additional information can be obtained upon request from the HEASARC. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey XMM-LSS 2-band Catalog
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The "Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey" (SERVS) Exploration Science program conducted deep IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 micron observations of five extragalactic fields (ELAIS-N1, Lockman Hole, XMM, ELAIS-S1, and CDFS).Objects in the single band catalogs are not required to have any counterparts in the other band. They are cut at CSNR > 5 and also have the low coverage areas at the edges of the survey omitted (POLY=1), resulting in a single-band reliability flag REL=1. They are thus deeper than the 2-band high reliability catalogs. These should be used if you are matching with a reliable catalog from another band (e.g. near-infrared), and simply want as many matches as possible, or are doing a statistical study.
Spitzer Wide-Area IR Extra-Galactic Survey Chandra X-Ray Sources
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This table contains results from deep combined observations with Spitzer and Chandra of the Spitzer Wide-Area Infrared Extragalactic Survey (SWIRE) in the ELAIS N1 region. This survey was used to investigate the nature of the faint X-ray and IR sources in common, to identify active galactic nucleus (AGN)/starburst diagnostics, and to study the sources of the X-ray and cosmic infrared backgrounds (XRB and CIRB). In the 17' x 17' area of the Chandra ACIS-I image there were approximately 3400 SWIRE near-IR sources with 4-sigma detections in at least two Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) bands and 988 sources detected at 24 micron (µm) with the Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS) brighter than a 24-um flux S_24 ~ 0.1 mJy. Of these, 102 IRAC and 59 MIPS sources have Chandra counterparts, out of a total of 122 X-ray sources present in the area with 0.5 - 8 keV flux > 10-15 erg cm-2 s-1. The SWIRE ELAIS N1 field was imaged by the IRAC multiband camera on Spitzer in 2004 January and with MIPS in early 2004 February. The observations were centered at the position (16h 00m, +59d 01'). The X-ray observations were taken as part of the ELAIS Deep X-ray Survey (EDXS) and are described in detail in Manners et al. (2003, MNRAS, 343, 293). For this analysis, the Chandra Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS) observation of 75 ks centered on (16h 10m 20.11s, +54d 33' 22.3") (J2000.0) in the ELAIS N1 region. The aim point was focused on the ACIS-I chips, which consist of four CCDs arranged in a 2 x 2 array covering an area of 16.9' x 16.9' (286 square arcmin). Bad pixels and columns were removed, and data were filtered to eliminate high background times (due to strong solar flares), leaving 71.5 ks of good data after filtering. Counts-to-photon calibration assumed a standard power-law model spectrum with photon index Gamma = 1.7. Sources were detected to flux levels of 2.3 x 10-15 erg s-1 cm-2 in the 0.5 - 8 keV band, 9.4 x 10-16 erg s-1 cm-2 in the 0.5 - 2 keV band, and 5.2 x 10-15 erg s-1 cm-2 in the 2 - 8 keV band. Sources are detectable to these flux limits over 90% of the nominal survey area. For this analysis, the authors used sources detected in the full band of ACIS-I only, of which there are 122 in the N1 region. Of the 102 sources in common between Chandra and SWIRE, 83 have significant detections in the separate soft X-ray band (0.5 - 2 keV) and 64 are detected in the hard (2 - 8 keV) band. A simple near-neighbor search was performed to cross-correlate the Spitzer and Chandra source catalogs within the Chandra ACIS-I chip image, using a d = 5" search radius (roughly the quadratic sum of the astrometric errors). All together, the authors found reliably associated counterparts for 102 of the 122 Chandra sources (84% in total). The vast majority of these were detected with the IRAC channels 1 and 2 (3.6 and 4.5 um): 100 of the 122 Chandra sources in each case. As many as 59 Chandra objects are reliably associated with MIPS 24 um sources (all of them having IRAC counterparts), and just 1 had a MIPS 70 um counterpart. Of the 102 Spitzer-identified Chandra sources, three turned out to correspond to Galactic stars on the basis of their position on color-magnitude plots and optical morphology and were excluded from the subsequent analysis (and this table). This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2007 based on CDS catalog J/AJ/129/2074 file table2.dat, This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
SMC X-Ray Discrete Sources
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This database contains the 70 `discrete' (i.e., more compact than a few arc minutes) Einstein IPC X-ray sources in the direction of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) that are tabulated in Table 2A of Wang & Wu (1992, ApJS, 78, 391). For full details about the data processing and selection criteria used to create the original source catalog, the above reference should be consulted. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
COSMOS VLA 3GHz Catalog
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The catalog contains sources selected down to a 5 sigma (sigma~2.3 uJy/beam) threshold. This catalog can be used for statistical analyses, accompanied with the corrections given in the data & catalog release paper (Smolcic et al. 2016). All completeness & bias corrections and source counts presented in Smolcic et al. (2016) were calculated using this sample. The total fraction of spurious sources in the COSMOS 2 sq.deg. is below 2.7% within this catalog. However, an increase of spurious sources (up to 24% at 5.0
Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey ELAIS-S1 2-band Catalog
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The "Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey" (SERVS) Exploration Science program conducted deep IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 micron observations of five extragalactic fields (ELAIS-N1, Lockman Hole, XMM, ELAIS-S1, and CDFS).The 2-band high reliability catalogs are matched [3.6] and [4.5] catalogs, with the low coverage areas near the edges of the survey omitted (POLY_12=1). These catalogs should be used if you are using SERVS to select your sample, as objects in this catalog should be highly reliable (>99.9%). To appear in the catalog objects must appear in both bands, and the detection in one band must be > 10-sigma in CSNR, where CSNR is the coverage-weighted signal-to-noise ratio.
Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey ELAIS-N1 2-band Catalog
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The "Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey" (SERVS) Exploration Science program conducted deep IRAC 3.6 and 4.5 micron observations of five extragalactic fields (ELAIS-N1, Lockman Hole, XMM, ELAIS-S1, and CDFS).The 2-band high reliability catalogs are matched [3.6] and [4.5] catalogs, with the low coverage areas near the edges of the survey omitted (POLY_12=1). These catalogs should be used if you are using SERVS to select your sample, as objects in this catalog should be highly reliable (>99.9%). To appear in the catalog objects must appear in both bands, and the detection in one band must be > 10-sigma in CSNR, where CSNR is the coverage-weighted signal-to-noise ratio.
SAS-3 Y-Axis Pointed Obs Log
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This database is the Third Small Astronomy Satellite (SAS-3) Y-Axis Pointed Observation Log. It identifies possible pointed observations of celestial X-ray sources which were performed with the y-axis detectors of the SAS-3 X-Ray Observatory. This log was compiled (by R. Kelley, P. Goetz and L. Petro) from notes made at the time of the observations and it is expected that it is neither complete nor fully accurate. Possible errors in the log are (i) the misclassification of an observation as a pointed observation when it was either a spinning or dither observation and (ii) inaccuracy of the dates and times of the start and end of an observation. In addition, as described in the HEASARC_Updates section, the HEASARC added some additional information when creating this database. Further information about the SAS-3 detectors and their fields of view can be found at: http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/sas3/sas3_about.html Disclaimer: The HEASARC is aware of certain inconsistencies between the Start_date, End_date, and Duration fields for a number of rows in this database table. They appear to be errors present in the original table. Except for one entry where the HEASARC corrected an error where there was a near-certainty which parameter was incorrect (as noted in the 'HEASARC_Updates' section of this documentation), these inconsistencies have been left as they were in the original table. This database table was released by the HEASARC in June 2000, based on the SAS-3 Y-Axis pointed Observation Log (available from the NSSDC as dataset ID 75-037A-02B), together with some additional information provided by the HEASARC itself. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .