Chandra Observations of High Energy X-ray Sources Discovered by INTEGRAL
John A. Tomsick (SSL/UCB), Arash Bodaghee (GCSU), Sylvain Chaty, (AIM/CEA/CNRS, APC), Maica Clavel (Univ. Grenoble Alpes), Francesca M., Fornasini (CfA), Jeremy Hare (SSL/UCB, GSFC), Roman Krivonos (SRI), Farid, Rahoui (Independent), and Jerome Rodriguez (AIM/CEA/CNRS)

TL;DR
This study used Chandra observations to localize and classify over ten high-energy X-ray sources discovered by INTEGRAL, identifying their nature as galactic or extragalactic objects and providing insights into their distances and classifications.
Contribution
The paper presents the first Chandra localizations and classifications of 15 unclassified INTEGRAL sources, including new identifications of cataclysmic variables and active galactic nuclei.
Findings
10 sources likely have Chandra counterparts
Two sources classified as intermediate polar-type CVs
Multiple sources identified as AGN or AGN candidates
Abstract
The International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory (INTEGRAL) satellite has detected in excess of 1000 sources in the ~20-100 keV band during its surveys of the sky over the past 17 years. We obtained 5 ks observations of 15 unclassified IGR sources with the Chandra X-ray Observatory in order to localize them, to identify optical/IR counterparts, to measure their soft X-ray spectra, and to classify them. For 10 of the IGR sources, we detect Chandra sources that are likely (or in some cases certain) to be the counterparts. IGR J18007-4146 and IGR J15038-6021 both have Gaia parallax distances, placing them at 2.5+0.5-0.4 and 1.1+1.5-0.4 kpc, respectively. We tentatively classify both of them as intermediate polar-type Cataclysmic Variables. Also, IGR J17508-3219 is likely to be a Galactic source, but it is unclear if it is a Dwarf Nova or another type of transient. For IGR J17118-3155,…
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