228 research outputs found
XMM observation of 1RXS J180431.1-273932: a new M-type X-ray binary with a 494 s-pulse period neutron star?
Low-mass X-ray binaries are binary systems composed of a compact object and a
low-mass star. Recently, a new class of these systems, known as symbiotic
-ray binaries (with a neutron star with a M-type giant companion), has been
discovered. Here, we present long-duration observations of the
source 1RXS J180431.1-273932. Temporal and spectral analysis of the source was
performed along with a search for an optical counterpart. We used a
Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis for the period search and evaluated the
confidence level using Monte-Carlo simulations. The source is characterized by
regular pulses so that it is most likely a neutron star. A modulation of
s (3 error) was found with a confidence level of 99%.
Evidence of variability is also present, since the data show a rate of change
in the signal of counts s hr. A longer
observation will be necessary in order to determine if the source shows any
periodic behavior. The spectrum can be described by a power law with photon
index and a Gaussian line at 6.6 keV. The X-ray flux in the
0.2--10 keV energy band is erg s cm. The
identification of an optical counterpart (possibly an M6III red-giant star with
an apparent visual magnitude of ) allows a conservative distance
of kpc to be estimated. Other possibilities are also discussed. Once
the distance was estimated, we got an -ray luminosity of L_X\ut<6\times
10^{34} erg s, which is consistent with the typical -ray luminosity
of a symbiotic LMXB system.Comment: in press on A&
On the optical counterpart of NGC300 X-1 and the global Wolf-Rayet content of NGC300
(Conext:) Surveys of Wolf-Rayet (WR) populations in nearby galaxies provide
tests of evolutionary models plus Type Ib/c supernova progenitors. This
spectroscopic study complements the recent imaging survey of the spiral galaxy
NGC 300 by Schild et al. (Aims): Revisions to the known WR content of NGC 300
are presented. We investigate the WR nature of candidate #41 from Schild et al.
which is spatially coincident with the bright X-ray point source NGC 300 X-1;
(Methods:) VLT/FORS2 multi-object spectroscopy of WR candidates in NGC 300 is
obtained; (Results:) We establish an early-type WN nature of #41, i.e. similar
to the optical counterpart of IC 10 X-1, which closely resembles NGC 300 X-1.
We confirm 9 new WR stars, bringing the current WR census of the inner disk to
31, with N(WC)/N(WN)~0.9. (Conclusions:) If #41 is the optical counterpart for
NGC 300 X-1, we estimate a WR mass of 38 Msun based upon ground-based
photometry, from which a black hole mass of > 10 Msun results from the 32.8 hr
period of the system and WR wind velocity of 1250 km/s. We estimate an 95%
completeness among WC stars and 70% among WN stars, such that the total WR
content is ~40, with N(WC)/N(WN)~0.7. From the Halpha-derived star formation
rate of the inner galaxy, we infer N(WR)/N(O)~0.04Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for A&A Letter
An ultraluminous supersoft source with a 4 hour modulation in NGC 4631
Context. Supersoft X-ray sources (SSSs) are characterised by very low
temperatures (< 100 eV). Classical SSSs have bolometric luminosities in the
range of 10^36-10^38 erg/s and are modelled with steady nuclear burning of
hydrogen on the surfaces of white dwarfs. However, several SSSs have been
discovered with much higher luminosities. Their nature is still unclear. Aims.
We report the discovery of a 4h modulation for an ultraluminous SSS in the
nearby edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 4631, observed with XMM-Newton in 2002 June.
Temporal and spectral analysis of the source is performed. Methods. We use a
Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis for the period search and evaluate the
confidence level using Monte-Carlo simulations. We measure the source
temperature, flux and luminosity through spectral fitting. Results. A
modulation of 4.2+-0.4 h (3 sigma error) was found for the SSS with a
confidence level >99%. Besides dips observed in the light curve, the flux
decreased by a factor of 3 within ~10h. The spectrum can be described with an
absorbed blackbody model with kT~67eV. The absorbed luminosity in the 0.2-2 kev
energy band was 2.7x10^38 erg/sec while the bolometric luminosity was a hundred
time higher (3.2x10^40 erg/s), making the source one of the most luminous of
its class, assuming the best fit model is correct. Conclusions. This source is
another very luminous SSS for which the standard white dwarf interpretation
cannot be applied, unless a strong beaming factor is considered. A stellar-mass
black hole accreting at a super Eddington rate is a more likely interpretation,
where the excess of accreted matter is ejected through a strong optically-thick
outflow. The 4 h modulation could either be an eclipse from the companion star
or the consequence of a warped accretion disk.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted as a Letter in Astronomy & Astrophysic
A 33 hour period for the Wolf-Rayet/black hole X-ray binary candidate NGC 300 X-1
Context. NGC 300 X-1 is the second extragalactic candidate, after IC 10 X-1,
in the rare class of Wolf-Rayet/compact object X-ray binary systems exemplified
in the Galaxy by Cyg X-3. From a theoretical point of view, accretion onto a
black hole in a detached system is possible for large orbital periods only if
the mass of the relativistic object is high or the velocity of the accreted
wind is low. Aims. We analysed a 2 week SWIFT XRT light curve of NGC 300 X-1
and searched for periodicities. Methods. Period searches were made using
Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis. We evaluated the confidence level using
Monte Carlo simulations. Results. A period of 32.8+-0.4h (3 sigma error) was
found for NGC 300 X-1 with a confidence level >99%. Furthermore, we confirm the
high irregular variability during the high flux level, as already observed in
the XMM-Newton observations of the source. A folded XMM-Newton light curve is
shown, with a profile that is in agreement with SWIFT. The mean absorbed X-ray
luminosity in the SWIFT observations was 1.5x10^38 erg/s, close to the value
derived from the XMM-Newton data. Conclusions. While Cyg X-3 has a short period
of 4.8 h, the period of NGC 300 X-1 is very close to that of IC 10 X-1
(34.8+-0.9 h). These are likely orbital periods. Possibility of formation of
accretion disk for such high orbital periods strongly depends on the terminal
velocity of the Wolf-Rayet star wind and black-hole mass. While low masses are
possible for wind velocities < 1000 km/s, these increase to several tens of
solar masses for velocities > 1600 km/s and no accretion disk may form for
terminal velocities larger than 1900 km/s.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, accepted as a Letter in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
Figure 6 will appear with a better quality in the A&A pape
X-ray properties of NGC 300. I, Global properties of X-ray point sources and their optical counterparts
We present X-ray properties of NGC 300 point sources, extracted from 66 ks of XMM-Newton data taken in 2000 December and 2001 January. A total of 163 sources were detected in the energy range of 0.3–6 keV. We report on the global properties of the sources detected inside the D 25
optical disk, such as the hardness ratio and X-ray fluxes, and on the properties of their optical counterparts found in B, V, and R images from the 2.2 m MPG/ESO telescope. Furthermore, we cross-correlate the X-ray sources with SIMBAD, the USNO-A2.0 catalog, and radio catalogues
A new luminous supersoft X-ray source in NGC 300
Context. We report the discovery of a new luminous supersoft source, XMMU J005455.0−374117, in the nearby spiral galaxy GC 300, in XMM-Newton observations performed on 2005 May 22 and on 2005 November 25. The source is not present in ROSAT data nor in the previous XMM-Newton observations of 2000 December/2001 January. The unique luminous supersoft source,XMMU J005510.7−373855, detected in the 1992 May/June ROSAT data and in the 2000/2001 XMM-Newton data, fell below detectability. This source already appeared highly variable in ROSAT observations.
Aims. We report on the temporal and spectral analysis of this new supersoft source (SSS) and compare its properties with the previous known SSS.
Methods. We present the light curves of the SSS, model its spectrum and estimate the corresponding flux and luminosities.
Results. The light curve of XMMU J005455.0−374117 does not show large fluctuations in any of the observations and its spectrum can be modelled with an absorbed blackbody with kT ∼ 60 eV. The corresponding bolometric luminosity is 8.1+1.4
−4.5 × 1038 erg s−1 in the first observation and drops to 2.2+0.5 −1.4 × 1038 erg s−1 six months later. No optical source brighter than mV ∼ 21.7 mag is found coincident with its position.
Conclusions. The luminosity of these two SSSs is higher than what has been found for “classical” SSSs. Their nature could be explained by beamed emission from steady nuclear burning of hydrogen onto white dwarfs, or accretion onto stellar-mass black hole with matter outflow or observed at high inclination angle. The presence of an intermediate-mass black hole seems unlikely in our case
NGC 300 X-1 is a Wolf-Rayet/Black-Hole binary
We present VLT/FORS2 time-series spectroscopy of the Wolf-Rayet star #41 in
the Sculptor group galaxy NGC 300. We confirm a physical association with NGC
300 X-1, since radial velocity variations of the HeII 4686 line indicate an
orbital period of 32.3 +/- 0.2 hr which agrees at the 2 sigma level with the
X-ray period from Carpano et al. We measure a radial velocity semi-amplitude of
267 +/- 8 km/s, from which a mass function of 2.6 +/- 0.3 Msun is obtained. A
revised spectroscopic mass for the WN-type companion of 26+7-5 Msun yields a
black hole mass of 20 +/- 4 Msun for a preferred inclination of 60-75 deg. If
the WR star provides half of the measured visual continuum flux, a reduced WR
(black hole) mass of 15 +4 -2.5 Msun (14.5 +3 -2.5 Msun) would be inferred. As
such, #41/NGC 300 X-1 represents only the second extragalactic Wolf-Rayet plus
black-hole binary system, after IC 10 X-1. In addition, the compact object
responsible for NGC 300 X-1 is the second highest stellar-mass black hole known
to date, exceeded only by IC 10 X-1.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS Letters in press. Images and animations
available from http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1004/ at 11am GMT on 27 Jan
1
Development of the opto-mechanical design for ICE-T
ICE-T (International Concordia Explorer Telescope) is a double 60 cm f/1.1
photometric robotic telescope, on a parallactic mount, which will operate at
Dome C, in the long Antarctic night, aiming to investigate exoplanets and
activity of the hosting stars. Antarctic Plateau site is well known to be one
of the best in the world for observations because of sky transparency in all
wavelengths and low scintillation noise. Due to the extremely harsh
environmental conditions (the lowest average temperature is -80C) the
criteria adopted for an optimal design are really challenging. Here we present
the strategies we have adopted so far to fulfill the mechanical and optical
requirements.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, contributed talk at 'An astronomical Observatory
at Concordia (Dome C, Antarctica) for the next decade', 11-15 May, Rome
(Italy
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