Chandra Localizations and Spectra of INTEGRAL Sources in the Galactic Plane
John A. Tomsick (SSL/UCB), Sylvain Chaty (AIM - Univ. Paris VII and, CEA Saclay), Jerome Rodriguez (AIM - Univ. Paris VII, CEA Saclay), Roland, Walter (ISDC, Observatoire de Geneve), Philip Kaaret (Univ. of Iowa)

TL;DR
This study used Chandra observations to precisely localize INTEGRAL-detected hard X-ray sources in the Galactic plane, identify their counterparts, and classify their nature, revealing several as HMXBs, AGNs, or CVs.
Contribution
First detailed Chandra localizations and spectral analysis of INTEGRAL sources in the Galactic plane, enabling accurate counterpart identification and classification.
Findings
Confirmed several sources as HMXBs, AGNs, or CVs.
Detected absorption features indicating surrounding material in some sources.
Provided flux upper limits for sources without Chandra counterparts.
Abstract
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…
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