Swift follow-up of unidentified X-ray sources in the XMM-Newton Slew Survey
R.L.C. Starling (1), P.A. Evans (1), A.M. Read (1), R.D. Saxton (2),, P. Esquej (1), H. Krimm (3), P.T. O'Brien (1), J.P. Osborne (1), S. Mateos, (1), R. Warwick (1), K. Wiersema (1) ((1) University of Leicester, (2), XMM-Newton SOC/ESAC, (3) USRA/NASA-GSFC)

TL;DR
This study uses Swift follow-up observations to identify and classify 94 previously unknown X-ray sources from the XMM-Newton Slew Survey, revealing their nature and variability to improve understanding of transient X-ray populations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed classifications and revised positions for a significant sample of Slew Survey sources, highlighting their transient and diverse nature.
Findings
29% of sources detected by Swift, indicating transient populations
Most undetected sources are likely extragalactic and highly variable
Identification of stellar, AGN, and other sources among the detected sample
Abstract
We present deep Swift follow-up observations of a sample of 94 unidentified X-ray sources from the XMM-Newton Slew Survey. The X-ray Telescope on-board Swift detected 29% of the sample sources; the flux limits for undetected sources suggests the bulk of the Slew Survey sources are drawn from one or more transient populations. We report revised X-ray positions for the XRT-detected sources, with typical uncertainties of 2.9", reducing the number of catalogued optical matches to just a single source in most cases. We characterise the sources detected by Swift through their X-ray spectra and variability and via UVOT photometry and catalogued nIR, optical and radio observations. Six sources can be associated with known objects and 8 may be associated with unidentified ROSAT sources within the 3-sigma error radii of our revised X-ray positions. We find 10 of the 30 XRT-detected sources are…
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