Flat-spectrum radio sources as likely counterparts of unidentified INTEGRAL sources (Research Note)
Manuela Molina, Raffaella Landi, Loredana Bassani, Angela Malizia,, John B. Stephen (INAF/IASF Bologna), Angela Bazzano (INAF/IAPS Rome), Antony, J. Bird (University of Southampton), Neil Gehrels (NASA Goddard Space Flight, Center)

TL;DR
This research identifies likely counterparts for unidentified INTEGRAL sources by cross-matching with flat-spectrum radio sources and confirming associations through X-ray follow-up, revealing diverse AGN types and new radio galaxy discovery.
Contribution
The study presents a method combining radio and X-ray observations to identify and classify previously unassociated high-energy sources from the INTEGRAL catalogue, including new discoveries.
Findings
Five out of six sources have X-ray counterparts.
Identified sources include a quasar, a radio galaxy, and an AGN of unknown type.
One source had no convincing counterpart.
Abstract
Many sources in the fourth INTEGRAL/IBIS catalogue are still unidentified, since they lack an optical counterpart. An important tool that can help in identifying/classifying these sources is the cross-correlation with radio catalogues, which are very sensitive and positionally accurate. Moreover, the radio properties of a source, such as the spectrum or morphology, could provide further insight into its nature. Flat-spectrum radio sources at high Galactic latitudes are likely to be AGN, possibly associated to a blazar or to the compact core of a radio galaxy. Here we present a small sample of 6 sources extracted from the fourth INTEGRAL/IBIS catalogue that are still unidentified/unclassified, but which are very likely associated with a bright, flat-spectrum radio object. To confirm the association and to study the source X-ray spectral parameters, we performed X-ray follow-up…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
