The Palermo Swift-BAT hard X-ray catalogue III. Results after 54 months of sky survey
G. Cusumano, V. La Parola, A. Segreto, C. Ferrigno, A. Maselli, B., Sbarufatti, P. Romano, G. Chincarini, P. Giommi, N. Masetti, A. Moretti, P., Parisi, G. Tagliaferri

TL;DR
This paper presents the second Palermo Swift-BAT hard X-ray catalogue covering 54 months, identifying over a thousand sources across the sky and analyzing their properties and counterparts in different energy bands.
Contribution
It provides an updated, extensive catalogue of hard X-ray sources with detailed analysis of their classifications and cross-band counterparts, enhancing understanding of high-energy sky sources.
Findings
Catalog includes 1256 detections above 4.8 sigma significance.
86% of sources have identified counterparts, 14% remain unassociated.
Comparison with Fermi LAT reveals distinct source populations.
Abstract
We present the Second Palermo Swift-BAT hard X-ray catalogue obtained by analysing data acquired in the first 54 months of the Swift mission. Using our software dedicated to the analysis of data from coded mask telescopes, we analysed the BAT survey data in three energy bands (15-30 keV, 15-70 keV, 15-150 keV), obtaining a list of 1256 detections above a significance threshold of 4.8 standard deviations. The identification of the source counterparts is pursued using two strategies: the analysis of field observations of soft X-ray instruments and cross-correlation of our catalogue with source databases.The survey covers 50% of the sky to a 15--150 keV flux limit of 1.0 x 10^-11 erg s^-1 cm^-2 and 9.2 x 10^-12 erg s^-1 cm^-2 for |b|< 10 degrees and |b|> 10 degrees, respectively. The Second Palermo Swift-BAT hard X-ray catalogue includes 1079 (86%) hard X-ray sources with an associated…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
