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SWBATSFXT - Swift BAT 100-Month Supergiant Fast X-Ray Transient Catalog

HEASARC
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Overview

Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs) are High Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs) that are defined by their hard X-ray flaring behavior. During such flares they reach peak luminosities of 1036 - 1037 erg/s for a few hours (in the hard X-ray), i.e., much shorter timescales than those characterizing Be/X-ray binaries. The authors have investigated the characteristics of bright flares (detections in excess of 5 sigma) for a sample of SFXTs and their relation to the orbital phase. They have retrieved all Swift/BAT Transient Monitor light curves, and collected all detections in excess of 5 sigma from both daily- and orbital-averaged light curves in the time range from 2005 February 12 to 2013 May 31 (MJD 53413 - 56443). The authors also considered all on-board detections as recorded in the same time span and selected those within 4 arcminutes of each source in their sample and in excess of 5 sigma.

This table contains the catalog of over a thousand Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) flares from 11 SFXTs, down to 15-150 keV fluxes of ~6 x 10-10erg/cm2/s (daily timescale) and ~1.5 x 10-9erg/cm2/s (orbital timescale, averaging ~800s) and spanning 100 months. The great majority of these flares are unpublished. This population is characterized by short (a few hundred seconds) and relatively bright (in excess of 100 milliCrab, 15-50 keV) events. In the hard X-ray, these flares last in general much less than a day. Clustering of hard X-ray flares can be used to indirectly measure the length of an outburst, even when the low-level emission is not detected. In their paper, the authors construct the distributions of flares, of their significance (in terms of sigma) and their flux as a function of orbital phase, to infer the properties of these binary systems. In particular, they observe a trend of clustering of flares at some phases as P_orb increases, as consistent with a progression from tight, circular or mildly eccentric orbits at short periods, to wider and more eccentric orbits at longer orbital periods. Finally, the authors estimate the expected number of flares for a given source for their limiting flux and provide the recipe for calculating them for the limiting flux of future hard X-ray observatories.

The BAT observes 88% of the sky daily, on average, so it is ideally suited to detect flaring in hard X-ray sources. Since 2005-02-12, the BAT Transient Monitor (Krimm et al. 2013, ApJS, 209, 14) has been providing near real-time light curves in the 15-50 keV energy range of more than 900 sources with a mean variance for one-day mosaics of 5.3 milliCrab. Several flares from SFXTs are regularly caught every year by the BAT Transient Monitor (BATTM).

The catalog contains a total of 1117 flares from 11 SFXT sources (the only other confirmed SFXT, IGR J11215-5952, never triggered the BAT: see Section 2.2 of the reference paper for more information about this source). They are divided into 46 BAT triggers (bat_subsample_flag = 'T', 43 in outbursts), 126 daily-averaged BATTM light curves (bat_subsample_flag = 'D'), 267 orbital-averaged BATTM light curves (bat_subsample_flag = 'O'), and 678 on-board detections (bat_subsample_flag = 'B'). For each flare, the time of the occurrence, duration, flux, and significance are reported.

Given the cut in sigma applied to the available BATTM and on-board detections, this catalog is a flux-limited sample of flares. Assuming a Crab-like spectrum (power-law of photon index 2.15), 5 sigma detections for one day and an average orbit typically correspond to fluxes of 5.98 x 10-10 and 1.46 x 10-9 erg cm-2 s-1, respectively, in the 15-150 keV band (or 3.38 x 10-10 and 8.24 x 10-10 erg cm-2 s-1 in the 15-50 keV band).


Catalog Bibcode

2014A&A...562A...2R

References

The 100-month Swift catalogue of supergiant fast X-ray transients.
I. BAT on-board and transient monitor Flares.
    Romano P., Krimm H.A., Palmer D.M., Ducci L., Esposito P., Vercellone S.,
    Evans P.A., Guidorzi C., Mangano V., Kennea J.A., Barthelmy S.D.,
    Burrows D.N., Gehrels N.
   <Astron. Astrophys. 562, A2 (2014)>
   =2014A&A...562A...2R

Provenance

This table was created by the HEASARC in August 2015 based on the union of CDS Catalog J/A+A/562/A2 files sample.dat (the properties of the confirmed SFXTs) and table4.dat (the catalog of the 1117 flares detected by the Swift BAT from 11 of the 12 confirmed SFXTs).

Parameters

Source_Name
The name of the SFXT, e.g., 'IGR J08408-4503'.

RA
The Right Ascension of the SFXT in the selected equinox. This was given in J2000.0 equatorial coordinates to a precision of either 0.01 or 0.1 seconds of time in the original table. This is the currently most accurate X-ray position.

Dec
The Declination of the SFXT in the selected equinox. This was given in J2000.0 equatorial coordinates to a precision of either 0.01, 0.1 or 1 arcsecond in the original table. This is the currently most accurate X-ray position.

LII
The Galactic Longitude of the SFXT.

BII
The Galactic Latitude of the SFXT.

Error_Radius
The uncertainty in the position of the SFXT, in arcseconds.

Ctrpart_Name
The name of the IR or optical counterpart of the SFXT. Information on the spin, orbital and/or superorbital periods of the SFXTs, the presence or absence of eclipses and the orbital eccentricities can be found in Table 2 of the reference paper, i.e., it is not included in this HEASARC table.

Spect_Type
The MK spectral type of the IR or optical counterpart of the SFXT.

SFXT_Number
A unique sequential identifying number assigned to each transient (irrespective of which source it came from) by the authors.

Name
The flare designation, consisting of the name of the SFXT and the sfxt_number parameter (the numerical identifier for the flare), e.g., 'IGR J08408-4503 SFXT 6'. This was created by the HEASARC for its convenience and should not be regarded as officially sanctioned.

BAT_Subsample_Flag
This flag parameter indicates which detection method caught the flare:

  Value   Meaning                                     Number of events

  'T'     BAT Trigger,                                     46
  'D'     from Daily-averaged BATTM light curves          126
  'O'     from Orbital-averaged BATTM light curves        267
  'B'     from on-Board detections                        678
  
In the reference paper the value of 'o' was used for events detected in orbital-averaged BATTM light curves, and the value of 'd' was used for events detected in on-board detections. For the convenience of our users, the HEASARC has changed these values to 'O' and 'B', respectively.

Time
The date and time of the SFXT flare. In the reference paper and the resultant CDS table from which this HEASARC table was derived, this was given in two different ways, viz., the MJD, e.g., 54012.61328, and the UT Date and Time, e.g., 2006-10-04 14:45:42. These two times actually differ by a few minutes, so that the HEASARC has created the times in this present table from the quoted values of UT Date and UT Time, since these latter agree with the trigger times in the online Swift database.

Flare_Duration
The flare duration, in seconds.

Flare_Significance
The significance of the flare, in terms of the number of sigma.

Flare_Mean_Flux
The mean flux of the SFXT flare in the 15-50 keV band, in milliCrab. Note that the Crab produces a count rate of 0.22 counts cm-2 s-1 in the BAT (15-50 keV band, on-axis), or a flux of 1.3 x 10-8 erg cm-2 s-1, i.e, 1 milliCrab is equivalent to 1.3 x 10-11 erg cm-2 s-1.

BAT_Trigger
The BAT trigger number corresponding to the SFXT flare, if it triggered the BAT.


Contact Person

Questions regarding the SWBATSFXT database table can be addressed to the HEASARC Help Desk.
Page Author: Browse Software Development Team
Last Modified: Wednesday, 23-Nov-2022 19:37:33 EST