Localizing INTEGRAL Sources with Chandra: X-Ray and Multi-Wavelength Identifications and Energy Spectra
John A. Tomsick (SSL/UC Berkeley), Arash Bodaghee (SSL/UC Berkeley),, Sylvain Chaty (AIM, Institut Universitaire de France), Jerome Rodriguez, (AIM), Farid Rahoui (Harvard University, CfA), Jules Halpern (Columbia, University), Emrah Kalemci (Sabanci University)

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations to identify and classify 18 hard X-ray sources from INTEGRAL, revealing a mix of active galactic nuclei and Galactic sources, including a confirmed symbiotic binary.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength identification and classification of INTEGRAL sources using Chandra data, distinguishing between AGN and Galactic objects.
Findings
Four sources are confirmed AGN based on IR and optical data.
One source, IGR J15293-5609, is confirmed as a Galactic symbiotic binary.
Several sources require further follow-up for classification.
Abstract
We report on Chandra observations of 18 hard X-ray (>20 keV) sources discovered with the INTEGRAL satellite near the Galactic plane. For 14 of the INTEGRAL sources, we have uncovered one or two potential Chandra counterparts per source. These provide soft X-ray (0.3-10 keV) spectra and sub-arcsecond localizations, which we use to identify counterparts at other wavelengths, providing information about the nature of each source. Despite the fact that all of the sources are within 5 degrees of the plane, four of the IGR sources are AGN (IGR J01545+6437, IGR J15391-5307, IGR J15415-5029, and IGR J21565+5948) and four others are likely AGN (IGR J03103+5706, IGR J09189-4418, IGR J16413-4046, and IGR J16560-4958) based on each of them having a strong IR excess and/or extended optical or near-IR emission. We compare the X-ray and near-IR fluxes of this group of sources to those of AGN selected…
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