The XMM-Newton serendipitous survey. VIII: The first XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalogue from overlapping observations
I. Traulsen, A. D. Schwope, G. Lamer, J. Ballet, F. Carrera, M., Coriat, M. J. Freyberg, L. Michel, C. Motch, S. R. Rosen, N. Webb, M. T., Ceballos, F. Koliopanos, J. Kurpas, M. Page, M. G. Watson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new catalogue of X-ray sources from overlapping XMM-Newton observations, enhancing detection sensitivity, accuracy, and variability analysis by employing a standardized multi-observation detection method.
Contribution
It presents a novel standardized strategy for simultaneous source detection across multiple observations, resulting in the first stacked catalogue with improved source parameters and variability insights.
Findings
Contains 71,951 sources, with 15% new compared to previous catalogues.
Enhanced detection sensitivity to faint sources.
Improved accuracy of source parameters through stacking.
Abstract
XMM-Newton has observed the X-ray sky since early 2000. The XMM-Newton Survey Science Centre Consortium has published catalogues of X-ray and ultraviolet sources found serendipitously in the individual observations. This series is now augmented by a catalogue dedicated to X-ray sources detected in spatially overlapping XMM-Newton observations. The aim of this catalogue is to explore repeatedly observed sky regions. It thus makes use of the long(er) effective exposure time per sky area and offers the opportunity to investigate long-term flux variability directly through the source detection process. A new standardised strategy for simultaneous source detection on multiple observations is introduced. It is coded as a new task within the XMM-Newton Science Analysis System and used to compile a catalogue of sources from 434 stacks comprising 1,789 overlapping XMM-Newton observations that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation · Nuclear Physics and Applications · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
