9,931 research outputs found
The Orbital Light Curve of Aquila X-1
We obtained R- and I-band CCD photometry of the soft X-ray transient/neutron-
star binary Aql X-1 in 1998 June while it was at quiescence. We find that its
light curve is dominated by ellipsoidal variations, although the ellipsoidal
variations are severely distorted and have unequal maxima. After we correct for
the contaminating flux from a field star located only 0.46" away, the
peak-to-peak amplitude of the modulation is ~0.25 mag in the R band, which
requires the orbital inclination to be greater than 36 degrees. The orbital
period we measure is consistent with the 18.95 h period measured by Chevalier &
Ilovaisky (1998). During its outbursts the light curve of Aql X-1 becomes
single humped. The outburst light curve observed by Garcia et al. (1999) agrees
in phase with our quiescent light curve. We show that the single humped
variation is caused by a ``reflection effect,'' that is, by heating of the side
of the secondary star facing towards the neutron star.Comment: 18 manuscript pages, 7 figures; accepted by A
Chandra Observations of SN 2004et and the X-ray Emission of Type IIp Supernovae
We report the X-ray detection of the Type II-plateau supernova SN 2004et in
the spiral galaxy NGC 6946, using the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. The position
of the X-ray source was found to agree with the optical position within ~0.4
arcsec. Chandra also surveyed the region before the 2004 event, finding no
X-ray emission at the location of the progenitor. For the post-explosion
observations, a total of 202, 151, and 158 photons were detected in three
pointings, each ~29 ks in length, on 2004 October 22, November 6, and December
3, respectively. The spectrum of the first observation is best fit by a thermal
model with a temperature of kT=1.3 keV and a line-of-sight absorption of
N_H=1.0 x 10^{22} cm^{-2}. The inferred unabsorbed luminosity (0.4-8 keV) is
~4x10^{38} erg/s, adopting a distance of 5.5 Mpc. A comparison between hard and
soft counts on the first and third epochs indicates a softening over this time,
although there is an insufficient number of photons to constrain the variation
of temperature and absorption by spectral fitting. We model the emission as
arising from the reverse shock region in the interaction between the supernova
ejecta and the progenitor wind. For a Type IIP supernova with an extended
progenitor, the cool shell formed at the time of shock wave breakout from the
star can affect the initial evolution of the interaction shell and the
absorption of radiation from the reverse shock. The observed spectral softening
might be due to decreasing shell absorption. We find a pre-supernova mass loss
rate of (2-2.5)x 10^{-6} M_{\odot} /yr for a wind velocity of 10 kms, which is
in line with expectations for a Type IIP supernova.Comment: total 19 pages including 7 figures. ApJ, in press. See
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/rho/preprint/SN2004etms.ps for the paper
including full resolution image
Correlated Timing and Spectral Variations of the Soft X-ray Transient Aquila X-1: Evidence for an Atoll classification
Based on Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer data, we discuss the classification of
the soft X-ray transient Aquila X-1 in the Z/atoll scheme, and the relation of
its kilohertz quasi-periodic oscillations (kHz QPO) properties to the X-ray
colors. The color-color diagram shows one elongated ("banana") structure and
several "islands" of data points. The power spectra of the island are best
represented by a broken power-law, whereas those of the banana by a power-law
below ~ 1 Hz plus an exponentially cut-off component at intermediate
frequencies (30-60 Hz). The parameters of these two components change in
correlation with the position of the source in the color-color diagram. Based
on the pattern that the source shows in the color-color diagram and its
aperiodic variability we conclude that Aquila X-1 is an atoll source. We have
also investigated the possible correlation between the frequency of the kHz QPO
and the position of the source in the color-color diagram. The complexity seen
in the frequency versus count rate diagram is reduced to a single track when
the frequency is plotted against hard or soft color.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Aql X-1 in Outburst and Quiescence
We present photometry and spectroscopy of the soft x-ray transient Aql X-1.
Optical photometry during an active state shows a strong (0.6 mag peak-to-peak)
modulation at a period of 19 hours. Infrared (K'-band) photometry during a
quiescent state limits any ellipsoidal variations to <0.07 mag (peak-to-peak),
which implies an inclination i<31 (90% limit). Spectroscopy in a quiescent
state shows at most very small radial velocity variations, which implies a very
low inclination of i<12 (90% limit). The low inclination is rather unexpected
given the large photometric modulation seen in the active state. The upper
limit to the equivalent width of the anomalous Li 6707A line is <0.3A, which is
similar to the measured strength of this line in several other x-ray
transients.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 12 pages, 5 figure
Modeling the Radio and X-ray Emission of SN 1993J and SN 2002ap
Modeling of radio and X-ray observations of supernovae interacting with their
circumstellar media are discussed, with special application to SN 1993J and SN
2002ap. We emphasize the importance of including all relevant physical
mechanisms, especially for the modeling of the radio light curves. The
different conclusions for the absorption mechanism (free-free or synchrotron
self-absorption), as well as departures from an CSM, as
inferred by some authors, are discussed in detail. We conclude that the
evidence for a variation in the mass loss rate with time is very weak. The
results regarding the efficiencies of magnetic field generation and
relativistic particle acceleration are summarized.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. Uses svmult.cls. To appear in proceedings of IAU
Colloquium 192 "Supernovae (10 years of SN 1993J)", April 2003, Valencia,
Spain, eds. J. M. Marcaide and K. W. Weile
X-ray emission from radiative shocks in Type II supernovae
The X-ray emission from the circumstellar interaction in Type II supernovae
with a dense circumstellar medium is calculated. In Type IIL and Type IIn
supernovae mass loss rates are generally high enough for the region behind the
reverse shock to be radiative, producing strong radiation, particularly in
X-rays. We present a model for the emission from the cooling region in the case
of a radiative reverse shock. Under the assumption of a stationary flow, a
hydrodynamic model is combined with time dependent ionization balance and
multilevel calculations. The applicability of the steady state approximation is
discussed for various values of the ejecta density gradient and different sets
of chemical composition. We show how the emerging spectrum depends strongly on
the reverse shock velocity and the composition of the shocked gas. We discuss
differences between a spectrum produced by this model and a single-temperature
spectrum. Large differences for especially the line emission are found, which
seriously can affect abundance estimates. We also illustrate the effects of
absorption in the cool shocked ejecta. The applicability of our model for
various types of supernovae is discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
On the mass of the neutron star in V395 Car/2S 0921-630
We report high-resolution optical spectroscopy of the low-mass X-ray binary
V395 Car/2S 0921-630 obtained with the MIKE echelle spectrograph on the
Magellan-Clay telescope. Our spectra are obtained near superior conjunction of
the mass donor star and we exploit the absorption lines originating from the
back-side of the K-type object to accurately derive its rotational velocity.
Using K0-K1 III templates, we find vsini=32.9 +/- 0.8 km/s. We show that the
choice of template star and the assumed limb darkening coefficient has little
impact on the derived rotational velocity. This value is a significant revision
downwards compared to previously published values. We derive new system
parameter constraints in the light of our much lower rotational velocity. We
find M_1=1.44 +/- 0.10 Msun, M_2=0.35 +/- 0.03 Msun, and q=0.24 +/- 0.02 where
the errors have been estimated through a Monte-Carlo simulation. A possible
remaining systematic effect is the fact that we may be over-estimating the
orbital velocity of the mass donor due to irradiation effects. However, any
correction for this effect will only reduce the compact object mass further,
down to a minimum mass of M_1=1.05 +/- 0.08 Msun. There is thus strong evidence
that the compact object in this binary is a neutron star of rather typical mass
and that the previously reported mass values of 2-4Msun were too high due to an
over-estimate of the rotational broadening.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
HST/STIS UV Spectroscopy of Two Quiescent X-ray Novae: A0620-00 and Centaurus X-4
In 1998 we made UV spectroscopic observations with HST/STIS of A0620-00 and
Cen X-4, which are two X-ray novae (aka soft X-ray transients). These binary
systems are similar in all respects except that the former contains a black
hole and the latter contains a neutron star. A UV spectrum (1700-3100A) is
presented for the quiescent state of each system in the context of previously
published UV/optical and X-ray data. The non-stellar, continuum spectrum of
black hole A0620-00 has a prominent UV/optical peak centered at about 3500A. In
contrast the spectrum of neutron-star Cen X-4 lacks a peak and rises steadily
with frequency over the entire UV/optical band. In the optical, the two systems
are comparably luminous. However, black hole A0620-00 is about 6 times less
luminous at 1700A, and about 40 times less luminous in the X-ray band. The
broadband spectrum of A0620-00 is discussed in terms of the advection-dominated
accretion flow model.Comment: 18 pages including 4 figures; tentatively scheduled for the March 10,
2000 issue of ApJ; minor revision
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