70 research outputs found
A window into the neutron star: Modelling the cooling of accretion heated neutron star crusts
In accreting neutron star X-ray transients, the neutron star crust can be
substantially heated out of thermal equilibrium with the core during an
accretion outburst. The observed subsequent cooling in quiescence (when
accretion has halted) offers a unique opportunity to study the structure and
thermal properties of the crust. Initially crust cooling modelling studies
focussed on transient X-ray binaries with prolonged accretion outbursts (> 1
year) such that the crust would be significantly heated for the cooling to be
detectable. Here we present the results of applying a theoretical model to the
observed cooling curve after a short accretion outburst of only ~10 weeks. In
our study we use the 2010 outburst of the transiently accreting 11 Hz X-ray
pulsar in the globular cluster Terzan 5. Observationally it was found that the
crust in this source was still hot more than 4 years after the end of its short
accretion outburst. From our modelling we found that such a long-lived hot
crust implies some unusual crustal properties such as a very low thermal
conductivity (> 10 times lower than determined for the other crust cooling
sources). In addition, we present our preliminary results of the modelling of
the ongoing cooling of the neutron star in MXB 1659-298. This transient X-ray
source went back into quiescence in March 2017 after an accretion phase of ~1.8
years. We compare our predictions for the cooling curve after this outburst
with the cooling curve of the same source obtained after its previous outburst
which ended in 2001.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of "IAUS 337: Pulsar
Astrophysics - The Next 50 Years" eds: P. Weltevrede, B.B.P. Perera, L. Levin
Preston & S. Sanida
Further constraints on neutron star crustal properties in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058
We report on two new quiescent {\it XMM-Newton} observations (in addition to
the earlier {\it Swift}/XRT and {\it XMM-Newton} coverage) of the cooling
neutron star crust in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058. Its
crust was heated during the 4.5 month accretion outburst of the source.
From our quiescent observations, fitting the spectra with a neutron star
atmosphere model, we found that the crust had cooled from 100 eV to
73 eV from 8 days to 479 days after the end of its outburst.
However, during the most recent observation, taken 860 days after the end
of the outburst, we found that the crust appeared not to have cooled further.
This suggested that the crust had returned to thermal equilibrium with the
neutron star core. We model the quiescent thermal evolution with the
theoretical crustal cooling code NSCool and find that the source requires a
shallow heat source, in addition to the standard deep crustal heating
processes, contributing 0.9 MeV per accreted nucleon during outburst to
explain its observed temperature decay. Our high quality {\it XMM-Newton} data
required an additional hard component to adequately fit the spectra. This
slightly complicates our interpretation of the quiescent data of 1RXS
J180408.9342058. The origin of this component is not fully understood.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
Consistent accretion-induced heating of the neutron-star crust in MXB 1659-29 during two different outbursts
Monitoring the cooling of neutron-star crusts heated during accretion
outbursts allows us to infer the physics of the dense matter present in the
crust. We examine the crust cooling evolution of the low-mass X-ray binary MXB
1659-29 up to ~505 days after the end of its 2015 outburst (hereafter outburst
II) and compare it with what we observed after its previous 1999 outburst
(hereafter outburst I) using data obtained from the Swift, XMM-Newton, and
Chandra observatories. The observed effective surface temperature of the
neutron star in MXB 1659-29 dropped from ~92 eV to ~56 eV from ~12 days to ~505
days after the end of outburst II. The most recently performed observation
after outburst II suggests that the crust is close to returning to thermal
equilibrium with the core. We model the crust heating and cooling for both its
outbursts collectively to understand the effect of parameters that may change
for every outburst (e.g., the average accretion rate, the length of outburst,
the envelope composition of the neutron star at the end of the outburst) and
those which can be assumed to remain the same during these two outbursts (e.g.,
the neutron star mass, its radius). Our modelling indicates that all parameters
were consistent between the two outbursts with no need for any significant
changes. In particular, the strength and the depth of the shallow heating
mechanism at work (in the crust) were inferred to be the same during both
outbursts, contrary to what has been found when modelling the cooling curves
after multiple outburst of another source, MAXI J0556-332. This difference in
source behaviour is not understood. We discuss our results in the context of
our current understanding of cooling of accretion-heated neutron-star crusts,
and in particular with respect to the unexplained shallow heating mechanism.Comment: Submitted to A&A. The supplementary video can be found at
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpJ053zq9-
Neutron star crust cooling in KS 1731-260:the influence of accretion outburst variability on the crustal temperature evolution
Review argumentation at scale
Product reviews represent a valuable source of information for both (potential) customers and sellers. Usually, reviews come in pairs (score, motivation), where the motivation is a piece of unstructured text explaining the score given to a product. For reviews, this setting is ideal to combine a quantitative assessment of a product with a qualitative explanation. Aggregating the numerical scores might be uninformative while parsing large quantities of text might be challenging.
Automated argument analysis can help in this process, and we previously developed an argument-based quality analysis pipeline that helps identify the most significant items from a corpus of reviews. Given that the pipeline is effective but time-consuming, this work sets out to improve its computational efficiency. Next to optimisation by conventional methods, we investigate the effect of reducing the number of text chunks that are used to build the argumentation graph.
We find that conventional methods significantly improve the computation time, which allows us to analyse much larger datasets of real-world reviews. When the number of tokens is scaled down, accuracy remains similar compared to the original version of the pipeline. However, we find that this does not necessarily result in a computation time reduction
Unexpected late-time temperature increase observed in two neutron star crust cooling sources -- XTE~J1701-462 and EXO~0748-676
Transient LMXBs that host neutron stars (NSs) provide excellent laboratories
for probing the dense matter physics present in NS crusts. During accretion
outbursts in LMXBs, exothermic reactions may heat the NS crust, disrupting the
crust-core equilibrium. When the outburst ceases, the crust cools to restore
thermal equilibrium with the core. Monitoring this evolution allows us to probe
the dense matter physics in the crust. Properties of the deeper crustal layers
can be probed at later times after the end of the outburst. We report on the
unexpected late-time temperature evolution (>2000 days after the end of their
outbursts) of two NSs in LMXBs, XTE J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676. Although both
these sources exhibited very different outbursts (in terms of duration and the
average accretion rate), they exhibit an unusually steep decay of ~7 eV in the
observed effective temperature (occurring in a time span of ~700 days) around
~2000 days after the end of their outbursts. Furthermore, they both showed an
even more unexpected rise of ~3 eV in temperature (over a time period of
~500-2000 days) after this steep decay. This rise was significant at the
2.4{\sigma} and 8.5{\sigma} level for XTE J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676,
respectively. The physical explanation for such behaviour is unknown and cannot
be straightforwardly be explained within the cooling hypothesis. In addition,
this observed evolution cannot be well explained by low-level accretion either
without invoking many assumptions. We investigate the potential pathways in the
theoretical heating and cooling models that could reproduce this unusual
behaviour, which so far has been observed in two crust-cooling sources. Such a
temperature increase has not been observed in the other NS crust-cooling
sources at similarly late times, although it cannot be excluded that this might
be a result of the inadequate sampling obtained at such late times.Comment: accepted for publication by A&A letter
Unexpected late-time temperature increase observed in the two neutron star crust-cooling sources XTE J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676
The effect of diffusive nuclear burning in neutron star envelopes on cooling in accreting systems
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