# Investigating the X-ray counterparts to unidentified sources in the   1000-orbit INTEGRAL/IBIS catalogue

**Authors:** R. Landi, L. Bassani, A. Bazzano, A. J. Bird, M. Fiocchi, A. Malizia,, F. Panessa, V. Sguera, P. Ubertini

arXiv: 1704.03872 · 2017-07-05

## TL;DR

This study uses Swift/XRT data to identify and classify the X-ray counterparts of 14 previously unknown high-energy sources from the INTEGRAL/IBIS survey, revealing several active galactic nuclei and binary systems.

## Contribution

It provides the first X-ray localizations and preliminary classifications for 14 unidentified INTEGRAL/IBIS sources using archival Swift/XRT data.

## Key findings

- 13 sources have identified X-ray counterparts.
- 4 sources are classified as absorbed AGN or binary systems.
- One source is associated with a Fermi gamma-ray object.

## Abstract

The latest INTEGRAL/IBIS all-sky survey lists 219 hard X-ray sources whose nature is still unknown. We report on our ongoing campaign aimed at identifying these high-energy emitters by exploiting the focusing capabilities of the X-ray Telescope (XRT, 0.2-10 keV) on board Swift, which allow an enhancement of the source localisation to arcsec level, thus facilitating the identification of the likely counterpart. By cross-correlating the list of the unidentified IBIS sources included in the latest IBIS catalogue with Swift/XRT archival data, we found a set of 14 objects, not yet reported in the literature, for which XRT data were available. We found no detection in only one case, a single X-ray association in 9 sources, and 2/3 associations in the remaining objects. We then made use of multi-waveband archives to search for counterparts at other wavelengths of these XRT detections and exploited X-ray spectral information in an attempt to determine their nature and association with the IBIS object. As a result of our analysis, we identified a single counterpart for 13 sources, although in some cases its nature/class could not be assessed on the basis of the information collected. More specifically, we found that SWIFT J0924.2-3141 and SWIFT J1839.1-5717 are absorbed AGN, while SWIFT J0800.7-4309 and 1SWXRT J230642.8+550817 are Cataclysmic Variable binary systems. Finally, we found that IGR J14059-6116 is likely associated with the Fermi source 3FGL J1405.4-6119. In the case of XMMSL1 J030715.5-545536 no XRT counterpart was detected. In all the other cases, optical/infrared spectroscopy is necessary to classify properly each X-ray counterpart and confirm their association with the INTEGRAL/IBIS detection.

## Full text

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## Figures

30 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.03872/full.md

## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.03872/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.03872