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IBISCAT - Fifth IBIS/ISGRI Soft Gamma-Ray Survey Catalog |
HEASARC Archive |
The IBIS soft gamma-ray sky after 1000 INTEGRAL orbits. Bird A.J., Bazzano A., Malizia A., Fiocchi M., Sguera V., Bassani L., Hill A.B., Ubertini P., Winkler C. <Astrophys. J. Suppl. 223, 15-15 (2016)> =2016ApJS..223...15B
Name
The standard designation for the source. Sources discovered by INTEGRAL have
been given names using the IGR prefix.
New_Flag
This flag parameter is set to 'N' to indicate that the specified source is
one of the ~300 new detections added since the fourth catalog.
RA
The Right Ascension of the high-energy source in the selected equinox. This
was given in J2000.0 coordinates and to a precision of 0.001 degrees in the
original table. The astrometric coordinates of the source positions were
extracted from the mosaics by the barycentering routines built into
SExtractor 2.5. In almost all cases, the position for a source was extracted
from the map yielding the highest source significance. In a few cases,
primarily for blended sources, other maps were chosen in order to minimize
the interference of other sources. Simultaneous fitting of multiple Gaussian
PSFs was used in the most difficult cases - these sources are indicated as
blended in the blend_flag parameter.
Dec
The Declination of the high-energy source in the selected equinox. This was
given in J2000.0 coordinates and to a precision of 0.001 degrees in the
original table. The astrometric coordinates of the source positions were
extracted from the mosaics by the barycentering routines built into
SExtractor 2.5. In almost all cases, the position for a source was extracted
from the map yielding the highest source significance. In a few cases,
primarily for blended sources, other maps were chosen in order to minimize
the interference of other sources. Simultaneous fitting of multiple Gaussian
PSFs was used in the most difficult cases - these sources are indicated as
blended in the blend_flag parameter.
LII
The Galactic Longitude of the high-energy source.
BII
The Galactic Latitude of the high-energy source.
Error_Radius
The positional error of the high-energy source, in arcseconds, expressed as
the radius of the 90% confidence circle. This was given as arcminutes with a
precision of 0.01 arcminutes in the original table. The point source location
error of IBIS is highly dependent upon the significance of the source
detected (Gros et al. 2003, A&A, 411, L179; Scaringi et al. 2010, A&A, 516,
75). The authors use the formulation of Gros et al. (2003), combined with the
significance of the detection used to locate the source, in order to define
an error on the source position. The source localization errors quoted are
for the 90% confidence limit.
SB_Flux_Limit
This parameter is set to '<' if the associated soft-band flux
of the particular source is an upper limit rather than a detection.
SB_Flux
The time-averaged flux of the high-energy source over the whole data set in
the soft energy band (20 - 40 keV), in units of milliCrab (mCrab).
Appropriate conversion factors for this band are 10 mCrab = 7.57 x 10-11
erg/cm2/s = 1.71 x 10-3 photons/cm2/s. This information is provided for
compatibility with past catalogs and as a general reference value.
SB_Flux_Error
The uncertainty in the time-averaged 20 - 40 keV flux, in mCrab.
HB_Flux_Limit
This parameter is set to '<' if the associated hard-band flux of the
particular source is an upper limit rather than a detection.
HB_Flux
The time-averaged flux of the high-energy source over the whole data set in
the hard energy band (40 - 100 keV), in units of milliCrab (mCrab).
Appropriate conversion factors for this band are 10 mCrab = 9.42 x 10-11
erg/cm2/s = 9.67 x 10-4 photons/cm2/s. This information is provided for
compatibility with past catalogs and as a general reference value.
HB_Flux_Error
The uncertainty in the time-averaged 40 - 100 keV Flux, in mCrab.
Source_Type
The astrophysical type(s) of the high-energy source. Up to 4 types may be
given: these follow the convention of Liu et al. (2007, A&A, 469, 807),
wherever possible. The following abbreviations have been used:
A = Atoll source (neutron star); AGN = Active galactic nuclei; AXP = Anomalous X-ray pulsar; B = Burster (neutron star); Be = B-type emission-line star; BH = Black hole (confirmed mass evaluation); BHC = Black hole candidate; BL = broad line; Cluster = Cluster of galaxies; CV = Cataclysmic variable; D = Dipping source; DN = Dwarf Nova; G = Globular Cluster X-ray source; GRB = Gamma-Ray Burst; HMXB = High-mass X-ray binary; IP = Intermediate Polar; LMXB = Low-mass X-ray binary; M = Microquasar; Mol Cloud = Molecular cloud; NL = narrow line; NS = Neutron Star; P = Polar; PSR = Radio pulsar; PWN = Pulsar wind nebula; QSO = Quasar; RG = Radio Galaxy; SFXT = Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient; SG = Supergiant; SGR = Soft gamma-ray repeater; SNR = Supernova remnant; Sy = Seyfert galaxy; Symb = Symbiotic star; T = Transient source; XB = Galactic X-ray binary; XBONG = X-ray bright, optically normal galaxy; XP = X-ray pulsar; Z = Z-type source (neutron star)
Variability_Flag
The relevance of the time-averaged fluxes diminishes as the data set
increases and the average time of activity for many of the sources is much
shorter than the on-source exposure. The "bursticity" parameter contains a
flag which indicates the presence of source variability in the 20-40 keV
band. A value of 'Y' indicates a bursticity of > 1.1, i.e., a 10% increase in
significance can be obtained by selecting a subset of the data. A flag value
of 'YY' indicates a bursticity of > 4, i.e., a 400% increase in significance,
indicating a strongly variable source. However, it should be noted that the
flux and significance values may derive from different energy bands and/or
subsets of the data, and may initially appear contradictory.
Significance
The maximum significance of the high-energy source in a single map. This is
given since it provides the best indication of the robustness of the source
detection. However, it should be noted that the flux and significance values
may derive from different energy bands and/or subsets of the data, and may
initially appear contradictory.
Exposure
The corrected on-source exposure time, in seconds (s), given to a precision
of 100 seconds. This is the total effective exposure on the source after all
filtering of the data has been carried out. This parameter was given in
kiloseconds (ks) in the original, as-published table.
Alt_Name
An alternative designation for the source.
Low_Signif_Flag
This flag parameter is set to "WARN" to indicates that the detection is
subject to a higher false positive rate (FPR) due to its lower significance
or shorter duration (see Section 2.4 of the reference paper for more
details). Overall, the authors estimate the FPR in this catalog is < 25% for
sources detected between 4.5 and 4.8 sigma in persistent maps, < 1% for
sources detected above 4.8 sigma in persistent maps, and (pessimistically) 1%
for sources detected via the bursticity method. Thus, they anticipate ~ 30
false positives in a catalog of 939 sources, i.e., 3.5%.
Blend_Flag
This flag parameter is set to "BLEND" to indicate that the source was
blended and that simultaneous fitting of multiple Gaussian PSFs was required.
The source positions determined by such simultaneous fitting are considered
reliable, but other measured values (flux, significance) may be contaminated
by nearby source(s) and may be unreliable.
Galcent_Flag
This flag parameter is set to "GCFLAG1" or "GCFLAG2" to indicate the source
is in the Galactic Center (GC) region and may suffer from confusion. The
central 4 degrees x 2 degrees region of the Galaxy represents a challenging
area for the INTEGRAL/IBIS map analysis (see Figure 6 in the reference
paper). The presence of unresolved sources (and presumably many sources below
the formal detection threshold creating a non-uniform background) means that
the maps in this area are dominated by systematic effects and the usual
statistical limits for source discovery do not apply. As a consequence, the
authors were extremely conservative in this region, and in fact all the GC
sources listed are already present in the INTEGRAL Reference Catalog (IRC).
Because of the complex and unresolved source distribution, the data quality
for these sources may be lower than for isolated sources away from the
Galactic Center. A value of GCFLAG1 means that the source lies within the GC
box, and is detected by the authors' standard methods. Furthermore, the
source is sufficiently resolved that they can estimate the flux and position
from their maps; nevertheless they expect that the detection may be affected
by nearby unresolved faint sources and the quantitative data should be
treated with caution. A value of GCFLAG2 means that there is clear evidence
of emission from the source position in one or more of our maps, but it lies
within an unresolved emission region. Therefore, the authors cannot
unambiguously attribute the emission to the source, and they therefore supply
the IRC position only. The fluxes are almost certainly contaminated by
emission from nearby unresolved sources, or indeed resolved ones. Using this
approach, there are 23 sources falling within the Galactic Center zone, of
which 11 have GCFLAG2 values.
Comments
A brief commentary indicates the detection method for each source: here the
term "persistent" means that the source detection is optimized in a mosaic of
all of the data, but the detection may actually derive from a number of
outbursts or flares, but no single outburst optimizes the detection. For
sources detected during an outburst, the MJD and duration are indicated.
Class
The HEASARC Browse object classification, based on the value of the
source_type parameter (typically the most specific part).