The Cambridge-Cambridge ROSAT Serendipity Survey -- V. Catalogue and optical identifications

Abstract
We report the results of a medium-depth X-ray survey of 20 ROSAT Position Sensitive Proportional Counter (PSPC) fields. 123 X-ray sources were detected down to a flux limit of S(0.5–2 keV) > 2 × 10−14 erg s−1 cm−2 lying between that of the Einstein Extended Medium Sensitivity Survey (EMSS) and the deepest ROSAT surveys. Optical identifications of 110 of these sources have revealed 68 QSOs, 12 narrow-emission-line X-ray-luminous galaxies (NLXGs), 24 stars, two BL Lac objects, two galaxies and two clusters. CCD imaging reveals the possible presence of galaxy groups or clusters at the positions of a further four X-ray sources. The number-redshift and log N-log S relations of the 68 QSOs are in better agreement with the faster rate of cosmological evolution for X-ray QSOs derived from ROSAT deep surveys [Lx∝(1 +z)3.34±01, zmax = 1.79] than with the evolution obtained from the EMSS [Lx∝(1 +z)2.55±01, the latter being rejected at greater than the 3σ level as a model for the current sample. We present the optical spectra and measurements of the emission lines. The equivalent-width distributions are consistent with those of QSO samples selected in other wavebands. We find no evidence for an inverse correlation between line width and X-ray spectral slope as recently reported for other ROSAT QSO samples.

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