The Chandra COSMOS Survey: III. Optical and Infrared Identification of X-ray Point Sources
F. Civano (SAO), M. Elvis (SAO), M. Brusa (MPE), A. Comastri, (INAF-OABo), M. Salvato (MPE), G. Zamorani (INAF-OABo), T. Aldcroft, A., Bongiorno, P. Capak, N. Cappelluti, M. Cisternas, F. Fiore, A. Fruscione, H., Hao, J. Kartaltepe, A. Koekemoer, R. Gilli, C. D. Impey

TL;DR
This study presents the identification and analysis of X-ray point sources in the Chandra COSMOS survey, revealing correlations between optical/infrared properties, morphology, and AGN activity, and updating the understanding of AGN loci.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive optical and infrared identification of X-ray sources in the COSMOS field, and explores their properties and correlations with morphology and luminosity.
Findings
97% of X-ray sources have optical/infrared counterparts
Strong anti-correlation between concentration index and X-ray to optical flux ratio
Most obscured AGN are in galaxies with regular morphology
Abstract
The Chandra COSMOS Survey (C-COSMOS) is a large, 1.8 Ms, Chandra program that has imaged the central 0.9 deg^2 of the COSMOS field down to limiting depths of 1.9 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s-1 in the 0.5-2 keV band, 7.3 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in the 2-10 keV band, and 5.7 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s-1 in the 0.5-10 keV band. In this paper we report the i, K and 3.6micron identifications of the 1761 X-ray point sources. We use the likelihood ratio technique to derive the association of optical/infrared counterparts for 97% of the X-ray sources. For most of the remaining 3%, the presence of multiple counterparts or the faintness of the possible counterpart prevented a unique association. For only 10 X-ray sources we were not able to associate a counterpart, mostly due to the presence of a very bright field source close by. Only 2 sources are truly empty fields. Making use of the large number of X-ray…
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