# SPIDERS: Selection of spectroscopic targets using AGN candidates   detected in all-sky X-ray surveys

**Authors:** T. Dwelly, M. Salvato, A. Merloni, M. Brusa, J. Buchner, S. F., Anderson, Th. Boller, W. N. Brandt, T. Budav\'ari, N. Clerc, D. Coffey, A., Del Moro, A. Georgakakis, P. J. Green, C. Jin, M.-L. Menzel, A. D. Myers, K., Nandra, R. C. Nichol, J. Ridl, A. D. Schwope, T. Simm

arXiv: 1704.01796 · 2017-05-25

## TL;DR

SPIDERS is a spectroscopic survey targeting X-ray-selected AGN and galaxy clusters, using Bayesian cross-matching with IR data to efficiently identify optical counterparts and compile a large, complete AGN sample for evolutionary studies.

## Contribution

This paper introduces a Bayesian method for selecting optical counterparts of X-ray sources, improving target selection accuracy for spectroscopic follow-up in large sky surveys.

## Key findings

- High fidelity in counterpart identification demonstrated
- Catalogues of X-ray sources with existing SDSS spectroscopy provided
- Projected coverage of 7500 deg² with >85% completeness for bright X-ray AGN

## Abstract

SPIDERS (SPectroscopic IDentification of eROSITA Sources) is an SDSS-IV survey running in parallel to the eBOSS cosmology project. SPIDERS will obtain optical spectroscopy for large numbers of X-ray-selected AGN and galaxy cluster members detected in wide area eROSITA, XMM-Newton and ROSAT surveys. We describe the methods used to choose spectroscopic targets for two sub-programmes of SPIDERS: X-ray selected AGN candidates detected in the ROSAT All Sky and the XMM-Newton Slew surveys. We have exploited a Bayesian cross-matching algorithm, guided by priors based on mid-IR colour-magnitude information from the WISE survey, to select the most probable optical counterpart to each X-ray detection. We empirically demonstrate the high fidelity of our counterpart selection method using a reference sample of bright well-localised X-ray sources collated from XMM-Newton, Chandra and Swift-XRT serendipitous catalogues, and also by examining blank-sky locations. We describe the down-selection steps which resulted in the final set of SPIDERS-AGN targets put forward for spectroscopy within the eBOSS/TDSS/SPIDERS survey, and present catalogues of these targets. We also present catalogues of ~12000 ROSAT and ~1500 XMM-Newton Slew survey sources which have existing optical spectroscopy from SDSS-DR12, including the results of our visual inspections. On completion of the SPIDERS program, we expect to have collected homogeneous spectroscopic redshift information over a footprint of ~7500 deg$^2$ for >85 percent of the ROSAT and XMM-Newton Slew survey sources having optical counterparts in the magnitude range 17<r<22.5, producing a large and highly complete sample of bright X-ray-selected AGN suitable for statistical studies of AGN evolution and clustering.

## Full text

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## Figures

40 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.01796/full.md

## References

91 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.01796/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.01796