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ONCCXOXRAY - Orion Nebula Cluster Chandra HRC X-Ray Point Source Catalog |
HEASARC Archive |
In particular, the authors assembled an extensive catalog of known X-ray/optical/IR and radio objects that fell within the HRC FOV. In addition to their list of HRC sources and the Chandra source lists of Garmire et al. (2000, CDS Cat. <J/AJ/120/1426>) and Schulz et al. (2001, CDS Cat. <J/ApJ/549/441>), they considered 14 catalogs from recent publications, producing a database of nearly 2900 distinct objects reported in at least one of the studies considered. A full list of references is given in the first column of Table 2 of the reference paper, along with a concise classification of the work and the referenced table number(s) from the original work.
The HRC on board the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (Weisskopf et al., 2002PASP..114....1W) observed the ONC for 63.2ks on 2000 February 4. The pointing (R.A. = 5h 35m 17s, DE=-5{deg} 23' 16" (J2000.0)) was chosen to place the Trapezium region and the bright O star Theta1 Ori C in the center of the field of view (FOV). A good fraction of the ONC region was included in the 30' x 30' HRC FOV. This HEASARC table lists the properties of the 742 X-ray sources detected in this observation as presented in the full version of Table 1 of the reference paper.
Chandra X-ray observation of the Orion Nebula Cluster. I. Detection, identification, and determination of X-ray luminosities. Flaccomio E., Damiani F., Micela G., Sciortino S., Harnden F.R.Jr, Murray S.S., Wolk S.J. <Astrophys. J. 582, 382 (2003)> =2003ApJ...582..382F
Source_Number
A running number for the X-ray source in order of increasing
J2000.0 Right Ascension within the field. Note that this is not the same
as the source numbering scheme used for the stars in the optical sample.
Name
The name of the X-ray source using the '[FDM2003] X' prefix recommended
by the CDS Dictionary of Nomenclature of Celestial Objects for the X-ray
sources listed in this table combined with the X-ray source number.
RA
The Right Ascension of the X-ray source in the selected equinox. This
was given in J2000.0 coordinates to a precision of 0.01 seconds of time in the
original table.
Dec
The Declination of the X-ray source in the selected equinox. This was
given in J2000.0 coordinates to a precision of 0.01 arcseconds in the original
table.
LII
The Galactic Longitude of the X-ray source.
BII
The Galactic Latitude of the X-ray source.
Error_Radius
The statistical uncertainty in the X-ray position, in
arcseconds.
SNR
The signal-to-noise ratio of the detected X-ray source.The authors chose
to accept detections with SNR > 4.74, corresponding to 10 expected spurious
detections throughout the FOV, instead of the more customary one, because:
(1) 10 is still a small fraction of the total number of detected sources;
(2) by lowering the threshold from 5.25-sigma (corresponding to one spurious
source) to 4.74, they gained ~100 good detections (after a "hand filtering" of
the detection list), of which only nine are expected to be spurious; and
(3) Chandra's superb spatial resolution ensures that the ~10 spurious sources
are extremely unlikely to be identified with other wavelength counterparts.
Counts
The net number of background and vignetting-corrected X-ray source
counts.
Counts_Error
The uncertainty in the net source counts.
Exposure
The effective exposure time, in seconds, at the position of the
X-ray source. This quantity, describing the spatially varying sensitivity of
the HRC plus Chandra mirror system, is derived from an exposure map calculated
with CIAO for an incident energy of 2.0 keV, i.e., the approximate temperature
of the ONC X-ray sources (see Section 5.1 of the reference paper). This choice
of temperature is not critical, however, because the normalized effective area
at any given point on the detector depends only marginally on energy: for
0.5 keV < kT < 3.5 keV, the values of effective exposure times at any given
location on the detector vary at most at the ~4% level.