453 research outputs found
Detection of the radial velocity curve of the B5-A0 supergiant companion star of Cir X-1?
In this Paper we report on phase resolved I-band optical spectroscopic and
photometric observations of CirX-1 obtained with the Very Large Telescope. The
spectra are dominated by Paschen absorption lines at nearly all orbital phases
except near phase zero (coinciding with the X-ray dip) when the absorption
lines are filled-in by broad Paschen emission lines. The radial velocity curve
of the absorption lines corresponds to an eccentric orbit (e=0.45) whose period
and time of periastron passage are consistent with the period and phase
predicted by the most recent X-ray dip ephemeris. We found that the I-band
magnitude decreases from 17.6 to ~16.8 near phase 0.9-1.0, this brightening
coincides in phase with the X-ray dip. Even though it is likely that the
absorption line spectrum is associated with the companion star of CirX-1, we
cannot exclude the possibility that the spectrum originates in the accretion
disc. However, if the spectrum belongs to the companion star, it must be a
supergiant of spectral type B5-A0. If we assume that the compact object does
not move through the companion star at periastron, the companion star mass is
constrained to ~<10 Msun for a 1.4 Msun neutron star, whereas the inclination
has to be ~> 13.7 degrees. Alternatively, the measured absorption lines and
their radial velocity curve can be associated with the accretion disc
surrounding a 1.4 Msun neutron star and its motion around the centre of mass.
An absorption line spectrum from an accretion disc is typically found when our
line-of-sight passes through the accretion disc rim implying a high
inclination. However, from radio observations it was found that the angle
between the line-of-sight and the jet axis is smaller than 5 degrees implying
that the jet ploughs through the accretion disc in this scenario.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, accepted by MNRA
Enabling pulsar and fast transient searches using coherent dedispersion
We present an implementation of the coherent dedispersion algorithm capable
of dedispersing high-time-resolution radio observations to many different
dispersion measures (DMs). This approach allows the removal of the dispersive
effects of the interstellar medium and enables searches for pulsed emission
from pulsars and other millisecond-duration transients at low observing
frequencies and/or high DMs where time broadening of the signal due to
dispersive smearing would otherwise severely reduce the sensitivity. The
implementation, called 'cdmt', for Coherent Dispersion Measure Trials, exploits
the parallel processing capability of general-purpose graphics processing units
to accelerate the computations. We describe the coherent dedispersion algorithm
and detail how cdmt implements the algorithm to efficiently compute many
coherent DM trials. We present the concept of a semi-coherent dedispersion
search, where coherently dedispersed trials at coarsely separated DMs are
subsequently incoherently dedispersed at finer steps in DM. The software is
used in an ongoing LOFAR pilot survey to test the feasibility of performing
semi-coherent dedispersion searches for millisecond pulsars at 135MHz. This
pilot survey has led to the discovery of a radio millisecond pulsar -- the
first at these low frequencies. This is the first time that such a broad and
comprehensive search in DM-space has been done using coherent dedispersion, and
we argue that future low-frequency pulsar searches using this approach are both
scientifically compelling and feasible. Finally, we compare the performance of
cdmt with other available alternatives.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Astronomy and Computin
Temporal variations in scattering and dispersion measure in the Crab Pulsar and their effect on timing precision
We have measured variations in scattering time scales in the Crab Pulsar over
a 30-year period, using observations made at 610 MHz with the 42-ft telescope
at Jodrell Bank Observatory. Over more recent years, where regular Lovell
Telescope observations at frequencies around 1400 MHz were available, we have
also determined the dispersion measure variations, after disentangling the
scattering delay from the dispersive delay. We demonstrate a relationship
between scattering and dispersion measure variations, with a correlation
coefficient of . The short time scales over which these quantities
vary, the size of the variations, and the close correlation between scattering
and dispersion measure all suggest that the effects are due to discrete
structures within the Crab Nebula, with size scales of AU
(corresponding to an angular size of mas at an assumed distance of 2200
pc). We mitigate the effects of scattering on the observed pulse shape by using
the measured scattering information to modify the template used for generating
the pulse arrival times, thus improving the precision to which the pulsar can
be timed. We test this on timing data taken during periods of high scattering,
and obtain a factor of two improvement in the root mean square of the timing
residuals.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Constraining the neutron star equation of state using quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries
Chandra or XMM-Newton observations of quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries can
provide important constraints on the equation of state of neutron stars. The
mass and radius of the neutron star can potentially be determined from fitting
a neutron star atmosphere model to the observed X-ray spectrum. For a radius
measurement it is of critical importance that the distance to the source is
well constrained since the fractional uncertainty in the radius is at least as
large as the fractional uncertainty in the distance. Uncertainties in modelling
the neutron star atmosphere remain. At this stage it is not yet clear if the
soft thermal component in the spectra of many quiescent X-ray binaries is
variable on timescales too short to be accommodated by the cooling neutron star
scenario. This can be tested with a long XMM-Newton observation of the neutron
star X-ray transient CenX-4 in quiescence. With such an observation one can use
the Reflection Grating Spectrometer spectrum to constrain the interstellar
extinction to the source. This removes this parameter from the X-ray spectral
fitting of the EPIC pn and MOS spectra and allows one to investigate whether
the variability observed in the quiescent X-ray spectrum of this source is due
to variations in the soft thermal spectral component or variations in the power
law spectral component coupled with variations in N_H. This will test whether
the soft thermal component can indeed be due to the hot thermal glow of the
neutron star. Irrespective of the outcome of such a study, the observed cooling
in quiescence in sources for which the crust is significantly out of thermal
equilibrium with the core due to a prolonged outburst, such as KS 1731-260,
seem excellent candidates for mass and radius determinations through modelling
the observed X-rays with a neutron star atmosphere model.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, proceedings "40 years of pulsars" conferenc
Celestial position of the companion of PSR J1740-5340
We present optical astrometry of archival ground and space based imaging of
the companion to PSR J1740-5340. The optical position of the companion is
significantly offset from the timing position of the pulsar. We briefly
investigate the effects of this inconsistency on other timing parameters and
compare our position with an improved position of PSR J1740-5340 from recent,
preliminary, timing results.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in A&
On the reconstruction of a magnetosphere of pulsars nearby the light cylinder surface
A mechanism of generation of a toroidal component of large scale magnetic
field, leading to the reconstruction of the pulsar magnetospheres is presented.
In order to understand twisting of magnetic field lines, we investigate
kinematics of a plasma stream rotating in the pulsar magnetosphere. Studying an
exact set of equations describing the behavior of relativistic plasma flows,
the increment of the curvature drift instability is derived, and estimated for
pulsars. It is shown that a new parametric mechanism is very efficient and
can explain rotation energy pumping in the pulsar magnetospheres.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Modeling Phase-resolved Observations of the Surfaces of Magnetic Neutron Stars
Recent observations by XMM-Newton detected rotational pulsations in the total
brightness and spectrum of several neutron stars. To properly interpret the
data, accurate modeling of neutron star emission is necessary. Detailed
analysis of the shape and strength of the rotational variations allows a
measurement of the surface composition and magnetic field, as well as
constrains the nuclear equation of state. We discuss our models of the spectra
and light curves of two of the most observed neutron stars, RX J1856.5-3754 and
1E 1207.4-5209, and discuss some implications of our results and the direction
of future work.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures; Proceedings of "40 Years of Pulsars", eds. C.
Bassa, Z. Wang, A. Cumming, V. Kaspi, AIP, submitte
The neutron star soft X-ray transient 1H1905+000 in quiescence
In this Paper we report on our analysis of a ~25 ksec. Chandra X-ray
observation of the neutron star soft X-ray transient (SXT) 1H1905+000 in
quiescence. Furthermore, we discuss our findings of the analysis of optical
photometric observations which we obtained using the Magellan telescope and
photometric and spectroscopic observations which we obtained using the Very
Large Telescope at Paranal. The X-ray counterpart of 1H1905+000 was not
detected in our Chandra data, with a 95 per cent confidence limit to the source
count rate of 1.2x10^-4 counts s^-1. For different spectral models this yields
an upper limit on the luminosity of 1.8x10^31 erg s^-1 (for an upper limit on
the distance of 10 kpc.) This luminosity limit makes 1H1905+000 the faintest
neutron star SXT in quiescence observed to date. The neutron star luminosity is
so low that it is similar to the lowest luminosities derived for black hole
SXTs in quiescence. This low luminosity for a neutron star SXT challanges the
hypothesis presented in the literature that black hole SXTs in quiescence have
lower luminosities than neutron star SXTs as a result of the presence of a
black hole event horizon. Furthermore, the limit on the neutron star luminosity
obtained less than 20 years after the outburst has ceased, constrains the
thermal conductivity of the neutron star crust. Finally, the neutron star core
must be so cold that unless the time averaged mass accretion rate is lower than
2x10^-12 M_sun yr^-1, core cooling has to proceed via enhanced neutrino
emission processes. We derive a limit on the absolute I-band magnitude of the
quiescent counterpart of M_I>7.8 assuming the source is at 10 kpc. This is in
line with 1H1905+000 being an ultra-compact X-ray binary, as has been proposed
based on the low outburst V-band absolute magnitude.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The quasi-persistent neutron star soft X-ray transient 1M 1716-315 in quiescence
We report on our analysis of a 20 ksec Chandra X-ray observation of the
quasi-persistent neutron star soft X-ray transient (SXT) 1M1716-315 in
quiescence. Only one source was detected in the HEAO-I error region. Its
luminosity is 1.6E32-1.3E33 erg s-1. In this the range is dominated by the
uncertainty in the source distance. The source spectrum is well described by an
absorbed soft spectrum, e.g. a neutron star atmosphere or black body model. No
optical or near-infrared counterpart is present at the location of the X-ray
source, down to a magnitude limit of I> 23.5 and K_s> 19.5. The positional
evidence, the soft X-ray spectrum together with the optical and near-infrared
non-detections provide strong evidence that this source is the quiescent
neutron star SXT. The source is 10-100 times too bright in X-rays in order to
be explained by stellar coronal X-ray emission. Together with the interstellar
extinction measured in outburst and estimates for the source distance, the
reported optical and near-infrared limit give an upper limit on the absolute
magnitude of the counterpart of I>8.6 and K_s>5.1. This implies that the system
is either an ultra-compact X-ray binary having P_orb<1 hr or the companion star
is an M-dwarf. We reconstructed the long term X-ray lightcurve of the source.
1M1716-315 has been active for more than 12 years before returning to
quiescence, the reported Chandra observation started 16.9+-4.1 years after the
outburst ended.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRA
- âŠ