Sins which require a korban chatat
Please note that within this file, korban chatat or just chatat refers to a sin offering. Chataot is the plural of chatat.
Links
Principles
Bringing a chatat without having sinned: Zevachim 9b
Liability for a chatat if one sins in attempting to perform a mitzvah: Keritot 19b
Whether transgression via thought is equivalent to transgression via speech: Shabbat 150a
When eating prohibited fats, the legal threshold for liability is consumption of an olive-sized amount: Yoma 80a
Liability requires violation of a type of prohibition which is similar to idolatry; this excludes missing the Pesach offering and missing circumcision: Makkot 13b; Keritot 3a
Whether a rebellious transgressor brings a korban chatat: Shabbat 69a; Keritot 2b
A list of which sins, when committed unintentionally, require a korban chatat: Keritot 2a
Any sin for which the penalty for intentional violation would be kareit: Keritot 7a-b
Does a chatat atone for missing opportunities to fulfill commandments: Zevachim 7a-b
Ordinarily one does not bring a chatat to atone for intentional sin, but there are exceptions: Keritot 9a, 25b
Does liability for a korban chatat require a deed of some sort: Shabbat 153b, 154a; Keritot 2a, 3b
Does speech count as a deed, for liability: Keritot 3b-4a
Prohibitions for which one does not bring a sin-offering are considered "light," even if the penalty for intentional violation is death: Keritot 23b, Rashi there "Issur Mitah"
Whether one brings a chatat or asham if Yom Kippur occurred between the time of the sin and the time one would bring the offering: Keritot 7a, 18b, 25a, 25b-26a, 26a-b
List of sins requiring a korban chatat