The NuSTAR Serendipitous Survey: the 80-month catalog and source properties of the high-energy emitting AGN and quasar population
Claire L. Greenwell (Durham-CEA), Lizelke Klindt, George B. Lansbury,, David J. Rosario, David M. Alexander, James Aird, Daniel Stern, Karl Forster,, Michael J. Koss, Franz E. Bauer, Claudio Ricci, John Tomsick, William N., Brandt, Thomas Connor, Peter G. Boorman, Adlyka Annuar

TL;DR
This paper presents an extensive 80-month NuSTAR X-ray survey catalog of over 1200 sources, mainly AGN, with detailed follow-up and analysis revealing their properties, redshifts, and optical characteristics, significantly expanding previous high-energy extragalactic surveys.
Contribution
The study provides the largest NuSTAR serendipitous survey catalog to date, with new source detections, comprehensive redshift and classification data, and insights into the optical properties of high-energy AGN.
Findings
1274 hard X-ray sources detected, 822 new
Redshifts obtained for 550 sources, 547 classified
Median luminosity 1.2 x 10^{44} erg/s, median z=0.56
Abstract
We present a catalog of hard X-ray serendipitous sources detected in the first 80 months of observations by the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). The NuSTAR serendipitous survey 80-month (NSS80) catalog has an unprecedented 62 Ms of effective exposure time over 894 unique fields (a factor of three increase over the 40-month catalog), with an areal coverage of 36 deg, larger than all NuSTAR extragalactic surveys. NSS80 provides 1274 hard X-ray sources in the keV band (822 new detections compared to the previous 40-month catalog). Approximately 76% of the NuSTAR sources have lower-energy ( keV) X-ray counterparts from Chandra, XMM-Newton, and Swift-XRT. We have undertaken an extensive campaign of ground-based spectroscopic follow-up to obtain new source redshifts and classifications for 427 sources. Combining these with existing archival…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
