{"@type": "dcat:Dataset", "accessLevel": "public", "bureauCode": ["026:00"], "contactPoint": {"@type": "vcard:Contact", "fn": "HEASARC Help Desk", "hasEmail": "mailto:andrew.ptak@nasa.gov"}, "description": "This table contains some of the results from a Chandra/ACIS-I observations of the massive ~ 13-14 Myr-old cluster, h Persei, part of the famous Double Cluster (h and Chi Persei) in Perseus. Combining the list of 330 Chandra-detected sources with new optical/IR photometry and optical spectroscopy reveals ~ 165 X-ray bright stars with V &lt;~ 23. Roughly 142 have optical magnitudes and colors consistent with cluster membership. The observed distribution of X-ray luminosity L&lt;sub&gt;x&lt;/sub&gt; peaks at L&lt;sub&gt;x&lt;/sub&gt; ~ 10&lt;sup&gt;30.3&lt;/sup&gt; erg s&lt;sup&gt;-1&lt;/sup&gt; and likely traces the bright edge of a far larger population of ~ 0.4-2 M&lt;sub&gt;sun&lt;/sub&gt; X-ray active stars. From a short list of X-ray active stars with IRAC 8-micron excess from warm, terrestrial zone dust, the authors derive a maximum X-ray flux incident on forming terrestrial planets. Although there is no correlation between X-ray activity and IRAC excess, the fractional X-ray luminosity correlates with optical colors and spectral type. By comparing the distribution of L&lt;sub&gt;x&lt;/sub&gt;/L&lt;sub&gt;star&lt;/sub&gt; versus spectral type and (V-I) in h Per with results for other 1-100 Myr-old clusters, the authors show that stars slightly more massive than the Sun (&gt;~ 1.5 M&lt;sub&gt;sun&lt;/sub&gt;) fall out of X-ray saturation by ~ 10-15 Myr. Changes in stellar structure for &gt;~ 1.5 M&lt;sub&gt;sun&lt;/sub&gt; stars likely play an important role in this decline of X-ray emission. Chandra observations of h Persei were taken with a 41.1 ks exposure on 2004 December 2, (Obs. ID 5407; Sequence Number 200341) with the ACIS detector (chips 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7). The data were obtained in dithered, timed mode, with a frametime of 3.2 s. On-board event rejection and event telemetry was in the VFAINT mode. The field was centered on RA(2000) = 2h19m00s, Dec(2000) = 57d07&#39;12&quot;, close to the center of h Persei from Bragg &amp; Kenyon (2005, AJ, 130, 134) (RA(2000) = 2h18m56.4s, Dec(2000) = 57d08&#39;25&quot;) and observed at a roll angle of 229 degrees. The data were not registered to an astrometric reference frame (e.g., Two Micron All Sky Survey, 2MASS). The ACIS-I field covers a 17&#39; x 17&#39; area. This table was created by the HEASARC in March 2009 based on the electronic versions of Tables 1 and 2 from the paper which were obtained from the Astronomical Journal web site. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .", "distribution": [{"@type": "dcat:Distribution", "downloadURL": "https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Browse/all/hperseicxo.html", "format": "HTML", "mediaType": "text/html"}, {"@type": "dcat:Distribution", "downloadURL": "https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/xamin/vo/cone?showoffsets&table=hperseicxo&", "format": "BIN", "mediaType": "application/octet-stream"}], "identifier": "ivo://nasa.heasarc/hperseicxo", "keyword": ["__"], "landingPage": "ivo://nasa.heasarc/hperseicxo", "license": "https://www.usa.gov/government-works", "modified": "2026-04-06", "programCode": ["026:000"], "publisher": {"@type": "org:Organization", "name": "High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center"}, "theme": ["Astrophysics"], "title": "H Persei Chandra X-Ray Point Source Catalog"}