Back to Search Start Over

The XMM-Newton Serendipitous Survey. V. The Second XMM-Newton Serendipitous Source Catalogue

Authors :
Watson, M. G.
Schröder, A. C.
Fyfe, D.
Page, C. G.
Lamer, G.
Mateos, S.
Pye, J.
Sakano, M.
Rosen, S.
Ballet, J.
Barcons, X.
Barret, D.
Boller, T.
Brunner, H.
Brusa, M.
Caccianiga, A.
Carrera, F. J.
Ceballos, M.
Della Ceca, R.
Denby, M.
Denkinson, G.
Dupuy, S.
Farrell, S.
Fraschetti, F.
Freyberg, M. J.
Guillout, P.
Hambaryan, V.
Maccacaro, T.
Mathiesen, B.
McMahon, R.
Michel, L.
Motch, C.
Osborne, J. P.
Page, M.
Pakull, M. W.
Pietsch, W.
Saxton, R.
Schwope, A.
Severgnini, P.
Simpson, M.
Sironi, G.
Stewart, G.
Stewart, I. M.
Stobbart, A-M.
Tedds, J.
Warwick, R.
Webb, N.
West, R.
Worrall, D.
Yuan, W.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Aims: Pointed observations with XMM-Newton provide the basis for creating catalogues of X-ray sources detected serendipitously in each field. This paper describes the creation and characteristics of the 2XMM catalogue. Methods: The 2XMM catalogue has been compiled from a new processing of the XMM-Newton EPIC camera data. The main features of the processing pipeline are described in detail. Results: The catalogue, the largest ever made at X-ray wavelengths, contains 246,897 detections drawn from 3491 public XMM-Newton observations over a 7-year interval, which relate to 191,870 unique sources. The catalogue fields cover a sky area of more than 500 sq.deg. The non-overlapping sky area is ~360 sq.deg. (~1% of the sky) as many regions of the sky are observed more than once by XMM-Newton. The catalogue probes a large sky area at the flux limit where the bulk of the objects that contribute to the X-ray background lie and provides a major resource for generating large, well-defined X-ray selected source samples, studying the X-ray source population and identifying rare object types. The main characteristics of the catalogue are presented, including its photometric and astrometric properties .<br />Comment: 27 pages (plus 8 pages appendices), 15 figures. Minor changes following referee's comments; now accepted for publication in A & A. Note that this paper "V", not paper "VI" in the series. Previous posting was incorrect in this regard

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0807.1067
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:200810534