Bibcode
Mittaz, J. P. D.; Carrera, F. J.; Romero-Colmenero, E.; Mason, K. O.; Hasinger, G.; McMahon, R.; Andernach, H.; Bower, R.; Burgos-Martin, J.; González-Serrano, J. I.; Wonnacott, D.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 308, Issue 1, pp. 233-256.
Advertised on:
9
1999
Citations
25
Refereed citations
24
Description
We present results of an extensive study of the X-ray spectral
properties of sources detected in the RIXOS survey, which is a large,
nearly complete sample of objects detected serendipitously in ROSAT PSPC
fields down to a flux limit of 3x10^-14ergcm^-2s^-1 (0.5-2keV). We show
that for X-ray surveys containing sources with low count rate, such as
RIXOS, spectral slopes estimated using simple hardness ratios in the
ROSAT band can be biased. Instead, we analyse three-colour X-ray data
using statistical techniques appropriate to the Poisson regime which
remove the effects of this bias. We also show that the use of
three-colour data enables some discrimination between thermal and
non-thermal spectra. We have then applied this technique to the RIXOS
survey to study the spectral properties of the sample. For the AGN we
find an average energy index of 1.05+/-0.05, with no evidence for
spectral evolution with redshift. Individual AGN are shown to have a
range of properties, including soft X-ray excesses and intrinsic
absorption. Narrow-emission-line galaxies (NELGs) also seem to fit to a
power-law spectrum, which may indicate a non-thermal origin for their
X-ray emission. We infer that most of the clusters in the sample have a
bremsstrahlung temperature >3keV, although some show evidence for a
cooling flow. The stars deviate strongly from a power-law model but fit
to a thermal model. Finally, we have analysed the whole RIXOS sample
(extending the flux cut-off to the sensitivity threshold of each
individual observation) containing 1762 sources to study the
relationship between spectral slope and flux. We find that the mean
spectral slope of the sources hardens at lower fluxes, in agreement with
results from other samples. However, a study of the individual sources
demonstrates that the majority have relatively soft spectra even at
faint flux levels, and the hardening of the mean is caused by the
appearance of a population of very hard sources at the lowest fluxes.
This has implications for the nature of the soft X-ray background.