SIMBAD references

2015ApJ...799...24B - Astrophys. J., 799, 24 (2015/January-3)

Source identification in the IGR J17448-3232 field: discovery of the Scorpius galaxy cluster.

BARRIERE N.M., TOMSICK J.A., WIK D.R., CHATY S. and RODRIGUEZ J.

Abstract (from CDS):

We use a 43 ks XMM-Newton observation to investigate the nature of sources first distinguished by a follow-up Chandra observation of the field surrounding INTEGRAL source IGR J17448-3232, which includes extended emission and a bright point source previously classified as a blazar. We establish that the extended emission is a heretofore unknown massive galaxy cluster hidden behind the Galactic bulge. The emission-weighted temperature of the cluster within the field of view is 8.8 keV, with parts of the cluster reaching temperatures of up to 12 keV; no cool core is evident. At a redshift of 0.055, the cluster is somewhat under-luminous relative to the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation, which may be attributable to its dynamical state. We present a preliminary analysis of its properties in this paper. We also confirm that the bright point source is a blazar, and we propose that it is either a flat spectrum radio quasar or a low-frequency peaked BL Lac object. We find four other fainter sources in the field, which we study and tentatively identify. Only one, which we propose is a foreground Galactic X-ray binary, is hard enough to contribute to IGR J17448-3232, but it is too faint to be significant. We thus determine that IGR J17448-3232 is in fact the galaxy cluster up to ~45 keV and the blazar beyond.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): binaries: general - galaxies: active - galaxies: clusters: individual: CXOU J174453.4-323254 - X-rays: individual: (CXOU J174437.3-323222, IGR J17448-3232)

Simbad objects: 14

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