5,170 research outputs found
Extended Emission from Cygnus X-3 Detected with Chandra
We have discovered extended X-ray emission from the microquasar Cyg X-3 in
archival Chandra X-ray Observatory observations. A 5" wide structure lies
approximately 16" to the NE from the core point source and may be extended in
that direction. This angular scale corresponds to a physical extent of roughly
0.8 lyr, at a distance of 2.5 lyr from Cyg X-3 (assuming a 10 kpc distance).
The flux varied by a factor of 2.5 during the four months separating two of the
observations, indicating significant substructure. The peak 2-10 keV luminosity
was about 5e34 ergs/s. There may also be weaker, extended emission of similar
scale oppositely directed from the core, suggesting a bipolar outflow. This
structure is not part of the dust scattering halo, nor is it caused by the
Chandra point spread function. In this Letter we describe the observations and
discuss possible origins of the extension.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 2 figures (1 color). Uses
emulateap
Keck Measurement of the XTE J2123-058 Radial Velocity Curve
We measured the radial velocity curve of the companion of the neutron star
X-ray transient XTE J2123-058. Its semi-amplitude (K_2) of 298.5 +/- 6.9 km/s
is the highest value that has been measured for any neutron star LMXB. The high
value for K_2 is, in part, due to the high binary inclination of the system but
may also indicate a high neutron star mass. The mass function (f_2) of 0.684
+/- 0.047 solar masses, along with our constraints on the companion's spectral
type (K5V-K9V) and previous constraints on the inclination, gives a likely
range of neutron star masses from 1.2 to 1.8 solar masses. We also derive a
source distance of 8.5 +/- 2.5 kpc, indicating that XTE J2123-058 is unusually
far, 5.0 +/- 1.5 kpc, from the Galactic plane. Our measurement of the systemic
radial velocity is -94.5 +/- 5.5 km/s, which is significantly different from
what would be observed if this object corotates with the disk of the Galaxy.Comment: 4 pages, accepted by ApJ Letters after minor revision
XMM-Newton Observations of the Be/X-ray transient A0538-66 in quiescence
We present XMM-Newton observations of the recurrent Be/X-ray transient
A0538-66, situated in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the quiescent state.
Despite a very low luminosity state of (5-8)E33 ergs/s in the range 0.3-10 keV,
the source is clearly detected up to ~8 keV. and can be fitted using either a
power law with photon index alpha=1.9+-0.3 or a bremsstrahlung spectrum with
kT=3.9+3.9-1.7 keV. The spectral analysis confirms that the off-state spectrum
is hard without requiring any soft component, contrary to the majority of
neutron stars observed in quiescence up to now.Comment: Accepted for proceedings of 5th INTEGRAL Worksho
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