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RBS: Help
OverviewThe ROSAT Bright Survey (RBS) is an identification program of the more than 2000 X-ray sources at high galactic latitude (absolute latitude b > 30 degrees) with a count rate of more than 0.2 cts/s detected during the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (Voges et al. 1999, A&A, 349, 389). The RBS identification program is more than 99.5% complete. A sub-sample of 931 sources with a count rate of more than 0.2 cts/s in the hard spectral band from 0.5 to 2.0 keV is 100% identified. The total survey area comprises 20391 square degrees at a flux limit of 2.4 x 10^(-12) erg/s/cm**2 in the 0.5 to 2.0 keV band. About 1500 sources of the complete sample were identified by correlating the RBS with the SIMBAD and NED databases. The remaining ~500 sources were identified by low-resolution optical spectroscopy and CCD imaging utilizing various telescopes. The RBS Catalog contains optical and X-ray information for each source, including the most massive complete sample of X-ray selected AGN ever assembled, with a total of 669 members, and a well-populated X-ray selected sample of 302 clusters of galaxies with redshifts of up to 0.52. Three X-ray sources in the RBS remain without optical counterparts, RBS 378, RBS 1223, and RBS 1556. While the first is a possible X-ray transient, the latter two sources are isolated neutron star candidates (Motch et al. 1999, A&A, 351, 177; Schwope et al. 1999, 341, L51). As noted elsewhere, this electronic version of the RBS Catalog has a small number of additions/corrections compared to the published version.Catalog Bibcode2000AN....321....1SReferencesSchwope, A.D., Hasinger, G., Lehmann, I., Schwarz, R., Brunner, H., Neizvestny, S., Ugryumov, A., Balega, Yu., Trumper, J., and Voges, W. 2000, Astron. Nachr., 321, 1.ProvenanceThis database was created by the HEASARC in August 2000 based on a machine-readable table supplied to the HEASARC by Axel Schwope in April 2000. Note that this table is an expanded version of Table 2 in the published paper and contains the following additional parameters: HR2 (hardness_ratio_2), and the Galactic hydrogen column density (nh_21cm).Updates and CorrectionsThis electronic version of the RBS Catalog has a few additions/corrections compared to the published version that were made by its authors:
RBS0321: Printed version lists only the F3IV/V star, Fleming identified the
WD as companion and likely X-ray ID (XID)
RBS0408: Redshift changed from 0.703 to 0.0701 (a typo discovered by A. Edge)
RBS1307: New observation: type now Sy1 (instead of Sy), redshift now 0.171
(instead of 0.176)
RBS1547: AG Dra now correctly identified as symbiotic binary
RBS1705: Printed version lists only a star of spectral type F8; the soft
X-ray spectrum suggests an undetected white dwarf as XID
RBS1818: The optical position has been changed to 22 04 17.5, -42 58 14,
according to Beuermann et al. 1999
Further comments:
RBS88: Grupe discovered the transient nature of the X-ray activity of this
Sy-galaxy
RBS1846: Grupe discovered the transient nature of the X-ray activity of this
Sy-galaxy
Parameters
RBS_Number
Rxs
RA
Dec
RA2000_Optical
Dec2000_Optical
LII
BII
Offset
Error_Radius
Count_Rate
Hard_Count_Rate
Hardness_Ratio_1
Hardness_Ratio_2
NH_21cm
Name
Broad_Class
Broad_class Explanation
AGN Active Galactic Nucleus, X-rays originate from the
central engine
GALAX Normal galaxy without any obvious nuclear activity.
X-rays originate predominantly from the stellar
constituents of the galaxy
CLUST Cluster of galaxies
GGRP Small (compact) group of galaxies
STAR Coronal or photospheric emitter of X-rays
CV Cataclysmic variable or related object
(white dwarf accretor)
XRB X-ray binary (neutron star or black hole accretor)
MC Magellanic Cloud source, not considered in the
identification program
VIRGO X-ray source in the Virgo region, not considered in the
identification program
Source_Type
Broad_class Possible Source_types
AGN QSO (Quasi-Stellar Object), BLL or BL (BL Lac object),
SY1...2 (Seyfert Galaxy of subtype 1...2),
NLS1 (Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 Galaxy), LINER,
XTG (X-ray Transient Galaxy), NELG (Narrow Emission-Line Galaxy),
SRB (Starburst Galaxy)
GALAX Hubble type
STAR PN (Planetary Nebula), spectral type (for coronal emitters and
hot stars), WD (White Dwarf), INS (Isolated Neutron Star)
CV AM (Am Her star or polar), IP (Intermediate Polar),
DN (Dwarf Nova), NL (Novalike variable), SSS (SuperSoft Source),
SYMB (Symbiotic binary)
XRB HMXB or HXB (High-Mass X-ray Binary),
LMXB (Low-Mass X-ray Binary), XRT (X-Ray Transient)
Redshift
Redshift_Flag
App_Mag
App_Mag_Flag
Value Explanation
: uncertain
> lower limit
C CDS/SIMBAD V-band
D CDS/SIMBAD B-band
N NED magnitude in the optical range
R Red (E) magnitude from APM/ROE scan of POSS/ESO/SERC plate
B Blue (O) magnitude from APM/ROE scan of POSS/ESO/SERC plate
S Below slit magnitude determined by folding a low-resolution
spectrum with the sensitivity curve of a V-filter
Flux
Log_Xray_Opt
Log_Lx
L_x = 4 pi * flux * (c * redshift / H_0)^2
and an assumed value of the Hubble Constant H_0 of 50 km/s/Mpc.
Comment_Flag
Class Contact PersonQuestions regarding the RBS database table can be addressed to the HEASARC User Hotline. |
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