The NuSTAR Serendipitous Survey: The 40 month Catalog and the Properties of the Distant High Energy X-ray Source Population
G. B. Lansbury, D. Stern, J. Aird, D. M. Alexander, C. Fuentes, F. A., Harrison, E. Treister, F. E. Bauer, J. A. Tomsick, M. Balokovic, A. Del Moro,, P. Gandhi, M. Ajello, A. Annuar, D. R. Ballantyne, S. E. Boggs, N. Brandt, M., Brightman, C. J. Chen, F. E. Christensen

TL;DR
This paper presents the first comprehensive catalog from the NuSTAR serendipitous survey, analyzing 497 high-energy X-ray sources over 40 months, primarily AGNs, with detailed multiwavelength characterization and insights into obscured AGN fractions.
Contribution
It provides the first full catalog and analysis of NuSTAR serendipitous sources, including their properties and obscuration fractions, based on extensive multiwavelength follow-up.
Findings
497 sources detected over 13 sq deg in 3-24 keV range
79% of sources have lower energy X-ray counterparts
Optical analysis shows ~53% obscured AGNs
Abstract
We present the first full catalog and science results for the NuSTAR serendipitous survey. The catalog incorporates data taken during the first 40 months of NuSTAR operation, which provide ~20Ms of effective exposure time over 331 fields, with an areal coverage of 13 sq deg, and 497 sources detected in total over the 3-24 keV energy range. There are 276 sources with spectroscopic redshifts and classifications, largely resulting from our extensive campaign of ground-based spectroscopic followup. We characterize the overall sample in terms of the X-ray, optical, and infrared source properties. The sample is primarily comprised of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), detected over a large range in redshift from z = 0.002 - 3.4 (median of <z> = 0.56), but also includes 16 spectroscopically confirmed Galactic sources. There is a large range in X-ray flux, from log( f_3-24keV / erg s^-1 cm^-2 ) ~…
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