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arxiv: 1808.09816 · v1 · pith:H7E5I22Ynew · submitted 2018-08-28 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE · astro-ph.SR

Spectroscopic identification of INTEGRAL high-energy sources with VLT/ISAAC

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE astro-ph.SR
keywords sourcesx-rayintegralbinarieshigh-energynaturedetectedidentification
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The INTEGRAL satellite has been observing the gamma-ray sky for 15 years and has detected over 900 X-ray sources of various nature. However, more than 200 of these sources still lack precise identification. Our goal is to reveal the nature of the high-energy sources detected by INTEGRAL. In particular, we want to improve the census of X-ray binaries. Photometry and spectroscopy were performed in July 2012 on 14 INTEGRAL sources in near-infrared at the Very Large Telescope on the European Southern Observatory-UT3 telescope equipped with the ISAAC spectrograph. We used K$_s$ images reaching to a depth of magnitude 18.5 to look for unique counterparts to high-energy detections to check for both extended sources and photometric variability. The analysis of near-infrared spectral features allows us to constrain the nature of these X-ray sources by comparing them to stellar spectra atlases. We present photometric and/or spectroscopic data for 14 sources (IGR J00465$-$4005, IGR J10447$-$6027, IGR J12489$-$6243, IGR J13020$-$6359, IGR J13186$-$6257, IGR J15293$-$5609, IGR J17200$-$3116, IGR J17404$-$3655, IGR J17586$-$2129, IGR J17597$-$2201, IGR J18457+0244, IGR J18532+0416, IGR J19308$+$0530, and IGR J19378$-$0617). We conclude that 5 of these are active galactic nuclei, 5 are cataclysmic variables, 2 are low- or intermediate-mass X-ray binaries, and 2 are Be high-mass X-ray binaries.

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