XMM-Newton observations of unidentified INTEGRAL/IBIS sources
A. Malizia, L. Bassani, V. Sguera, J.B. Stephen, A. Bazzano, M., Fiocchi, and A.J. Bird

TL;DR
This study uses XMM-Newton X-ray observations to identify and classify previously unknown high-energy sources from the INTEGRAL/IBIS catalogue, improving their positional accuracy and understanding their nature.
Contribution
It provides new X-ray identifications and classifications for six unidentified INTEGRAL/IBIS sources using archival XMM-Newton data, enhancing source understanding.
Findings
Identified likely counterparts for 4 sources with improved positions.
Classified sources as AGN, HMXB, or transient based on spectral analysis.
Discovered one transient source with no X-ray detection, indicating possible transient behavior.
Abstract
About 30% of the sources in the 4th INTEGRAL-IBIS catalogue are unidentified in that they lack an optical counterpart. To be able to classify them, X-ray observations are of crucial importance as they can place tighter constraints on the high energy error box, which is usually of the order of a few arcminutes, and allow their broad band spectrum to be studied. To this aim we have cross-correlated the list of all unidentified IBIS sources in the fourth catalogue with the archive of all XMM-Newton pointings, finding a set of 6 objects with archival data. For 1 of them, IGR J17331-2406, no X-ray source is detected by XMM inside the IBIS error box, most likely due to the fact that it is a transient object. In the case of IGR J17445-2747 two possible X-ray counterparts are found inside the IBIS error box: one is very weak while the other is bright but only detected once. In each of the…
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