We report on the results of observations of hard X-ray sources in the
Galactic plane with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The hard X-ray IGR sources
were discovered by the INTEGRAL satellite, and the goals of the Chandra
observations are to provide sub-arcsecond localizations to obtain optical and
infrared counterparts and to provide constraints on their 0.3-10 keV spectra.
We obtained relatively short, ~5 ks, observations for 20 IGR sources and find a
bright Chandra source in INTEGRAL error circles in 12 cases. In 11 of these
cases, a cross-correlation with optical and/or infrared source catalogs yields
a counterpart, and the range of J-band magnitudes is 8.1-16.4. Also, in 4
cases, the Chandra X-ray spectra show evidence for absorbing material
surrounding the compact object with a column density of local material in
excess of 5x10^22 cm^-2. We confirm that IGR J00234+6141 is a Cataclysmic
Variable and IGR J14515-5542 is an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN). We also
confirm that IGR J06074+2205, IGR J10101-5645, IGR J11305-6256, and IGR
J17200-3116 are High Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs). Our results (along with
follow-up optical spectroscopy reported elsewhere) indicate that IGR
J11435-6109 is an HMXB and IGR J18259-0706 is an AGN. We find that IGR
J09026-4812, IGR J18214-1318, and IGR J18325-0756 may be HMXBs. In cases where
we do not find a Chandra counterpart, the flux upper limits place interesting
constraints on the luminosities of black hole and neutron star X-ray transients
in quiescence.Comment: Accepted by Ap