5 research outputs found
INTEGRAL/IBIS 7-year All-Sky Hard X-Ray Survey. Part II: Catalog of Sources
This paper is the second in a series devoted to the hard X-ray (17-60 keV)
whole sky survey performed by the INTEGRAL observatory over seven years. Here
we present a catalog of detected sources which includes 521 objects, 449 of
which exceed a 5 sigma detection threshold on the time-averaged map of the sky,
and 53 were detected in various subsamples of exposures. Among the identified
sources with known and suspected nature, 262 are Galactic (101 low-mass X-ray
binaries, 95 high-mass X-ray binaries, 36 cataclysmic variables, and 30 of
other types) and 219 are extragalactic, including 214 active galactic nuclei
(AGNs), 4 galaxy clusters, and galaxy ESO 389-G 002. The extragalactic (|b|>5
deg) and Galactic (|b|<5 deg) persistently detected source samples are of high
identification completeness (respectively ~96% and ~94%) and valuable for
population studies.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
The VSOP 5 GHz AGN survey I. Compilation and observations
The VSOP mission is a Japanese-led project to image radio sources with sub-milliarcsec resolution by correlating the signal from the orbiting 8-m telescope, HALCA, with a global array of telescopes. Twenty-five percent of the scientific time of this mission is devoted to a survey of 402 bright, small-diameter extra-galactic radio sources at 5 GHz. The major goals of the VSOP Survey are statistical in nature: to determine the brightness temperature and approximate structure; to provide a source list for use with future space VLBI missions; and to compare radio properties with other data throughout the EM spectrum. This paper describes: the compilation of a complete list of radio sources associated with active galactic nuclei (AGN); the selection of the subsample of sources to be observed with VSOP; the extensive ground resources used for the Survey; the status of the observations as of 2000 July; the data-analysis methods; and several examples of results from the VSOP Survey. More detailed results from the full sample will be given in future papers