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A&A 457, 501-515 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20064904
The XMM-Newton survey of the ELAIS-S1 field
I. Number counts, angular correlation function and X-ray spectral properties
S. Puccetti1, 2, F. Fiore1, V. D'Elia1, I. Pillitteri3, C. Feruglio1, A. Grazian1, M. Brusa4, P. Ciliegi5, A. Comastri5, C. Gruppioni5, M. Mignoli5, C. Vignali6, G. Zamorani5, F. La Franca7, N. Sacchi7, A. Franceschini8, S. Berta8, H. Buttery9 and J. E. Dias91 INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, via Frascati 33, Monteporzio-Catone (RM) 00040, Italy
e-mail: puccetti@mporzio.astro.it
2 Dip. di Fisica, Università di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy
3 Dip. di Fisica, Universitá degli Studi di Palermo, Italy
4 Max Planck Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik (MPE), Giessenbachstrasse 1, 85748 Garching bei München, Germany
5 INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Bologna, Italy
6 Dip. di Astronomia, Università di Bologna, Italy
7 Dip. di Fisica, Università Roma Tre, Italy
8 Dip. di Astronomia, Università di Padova, Italy
9 INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Italy
(Received 24 January 2006 / Accepted 3 July 2006 )
Abstract
Aims.The formation and evolution of cosmic structures can be probed by studying
the evolution of the luminosity function of the Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs),
galaxies and clusters of galaxies and of the clustering of the X-ray active
Universe, compared to the IR-UV active Universe.
Methods.To this purpose, we have surveyed with XMM-Newton the central
~0.6 deg2 region of the ELAIS-S1 field down to flux limits of
~5.5
10-16
(0.5-2 keV, soft band, S), ~2
10-15
(2-10 keV, hard band, H), and ~4
10-15
(5-10 keV, ultra hard band, HH). We present here the
analysis of the XMM-Newton observations, the number counts in
different energy bands and the clustering properties of the X-ray sources.
Results.We detect a total of 478 sources, 395 and 205 of which detected in
the S and H bands respectively. We identified 7 clearly extended
sources and estimated their redshift through X-ray spectral fits with
thermal models. In four cases the redshift is consistent with z=0.4,
so we may have detected a large scale structure formed by groups and
clusters of galaxies through their hot intra-cluster gas emission. We
have computed the angular correlation function of the sources in the S
and H bands finding best fit correlation angles
3.8 arcsec and
7.8 arcsec in the two bands
respectively. The correlation angle of H band sources is
therefore formally ~2.5 times that of the S band sources,
although the difference is at only ~
confidence level.
A rough estimate of the present-day
correlation length r0 can be obtained inverting the Limber equation and
assuming an appropriate redshift distribution dN/dz. The results
range between 12.8 and 9.8 h-1 Mpc in the S band and between 17.9 and 13.4 h-1 Mpc in the H band, with 30-40% statistical errors,
assuming either smooth redshift distributions or redshift distributions with
spikes accounting for the presence of significant structure at z=0.4.
The relative density of the S band sources is higher near the clusters
and groups at
and extends toward East and toward
South/West. This suggests that the structure is complex, with a size
comparable to the full XMM-Newton field. Conversely, the highest
relative source densities of the H band sources are located in the
central-west region of the field.
Key words: X-rays: galaxies -- galaxies: active -- large-scale structure of Universe
© ESO 2006
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