63 research outputs found
A search for near infrared counterparts of 3 pulsar wind nebulae
While pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) and their associated isolated pulsars are
commonly detected at X-ray energies, they are much rarer at near infrared (nIR)
and optical wavelengths. Here we examine three PWN systems in the Galactic
plane - IGR J14003-6326, HESS J1632-478 and IGR J18490-0000 - in a bid to
identify optical/nIR emission associated with either the extended PWNe or their
previously detected X-ray point sources. We obtain optical/nIR images of the
three fields with the ESO - New Technology Telescope and apply standard
photometric and astrometric calibrations. We find no evidence of any extended
emission associated with the PWNe in any of the fields; neither do we find any
new counterparts to the X-ray point sources, except to confirm the magnitude of
the previously identified counterpart candidate of IGR J18490-0000. Further
observations are required to confirm the association of the nIR source to IGR
J18490-0000 and to detect counterparts to IGR J14003-6326 and HESS J1632-478,
while a more accurate X-ray position is required to reduce the probability of a
chance superposition in the field of the latter.Comment: Accepted to A&A (4 pages, 1 figure
INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton and ESO/NTT identification of AX J1749.1-2733: an obscured and probably distant Be/X-ray binary
AX J1749.1-2733 is an unclassified transient X-ray source discovered during
surveys by ASCA in 1993-1999. A multi-wavelength study in NIR, optical, X-rays
and hard X-rays is undertaken in order to determine its nature. AX J1749.1-2733
is a new high-mass X-ray binary pulsar with an orbital period of 185.5+/-1.1 d
(or 185.5/f with f=2,3 or 4) and a spin period of ~66 s, parameters typical of
a Be/X-ray binary. The outbursts last ~12 d. A spin-down of 0.08+/-0.02 s/yr is
also observed, very likely due to the propeller effect. The most accurate X-ray
position is R.A. (2000) =17h49m06.8s and Dec. = -27deg32'32".5 (unc. 2"). The
high-energy broad-band spectrum is well-fitted with an absorbed powerlaw and a
high-energy cutoff with values NH=(20+/-1)e22 cm-2, Gamma=1.0+/-0.1, and
Ecut=21+/-3 keV. The only optical/NIR candidate counterpart within the X-ray
error circle has magnitudes of R=21.9+/-0.1, I=20.92+/-0.09, J=17.42+/-0.03,
H=16.71+/-0.02, and Ks=15.75+/-0.07, which points towards a Be star located far
away (> 8.5 kpc) and highly absorbed (NH~1.7e22 cm-2). The average 22-50 keV
luminosity is (0.4-0.9)e36 erg/s during the long outbursts and 3e36 erg/s
during the bright flare that occurred on MJD 52891 for an assumed distance of
8.5 kpc.Comment: accepted A&A, 11 pages, 9 figure
The nature of the X-ray binary IGR J19294+1816 from INTEGRAL, RXTE, and Swift observations
We report the results of a high-energy multi-instrumental campaign with
INTEGRAL, RXTE, and Swift of the recently discovered INTEGRAL source IGR
J19294+1816. The Swift/XRT data allow us to refine the position of the source
to RA= 19h 29m 55.9s Dec=+18deg 18' 38.4" (+- 3.5"), which in turn permits us
to identify a candidate infrared counterpart. The Swift and RXTE spectra are
well fitted with absorbed power laws with hard (Gamma ~ 1) photon indices.
During the longest Swift observation, we obtained evidence of absorption in
true excess to the Galactic value, which may indicate some intrinsic absorption
in this source. We detected a strong (P=40%) pulsation at 12.43781 (+-0.00003)
s that we interpret as the spin period of a pulsar. All these results, coupled
with the possible 117 day orbital period, point to IGR J19294+1816 being an
HMXB with a Be companion star. However, while the long-term INTEGRAL/IBIS/ISGRI
18--40 keV light curve shows that the source spends most of its time in an
undetectable state, we detect occurrences of short (~2000-3000 s) and intense
flares that are more typical of supergiant fast X-ray transients. We therefore
cannot make firm conclusions on the type of system, and we discuss the possible
implications of IGR J19294+1816 being an SFXT.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
HESS J1632-478: an energetic relic
HESS J1632-478 is an extended and still unidentified TeV source in the
galactic plane. In order to identify the source of the very high energy
emission and to constrain its spectral energy distribution, we used a deep
observation of the field obtained with XMM-Newton together with data from
Molonglo, Spitzer and Fermi to detect counterparts at other wavelengths. The
flux density emitted by HESS J1632-478 peaks at very high energies and is more
than 20 times weaker at all other wavelengths probed. The source spectrum
features two large prominent bumps with the synchrotron emission peaking in the
ultraviolet and the external inverse Compton emission peaking in the TeV. HESS
J1632-478 is an energetic pulsar wind nebula with an age of the order of 10^4
years. Its bolometric (mostly GeV-TeV) luminosity reaches 10% of the current
pulsar spin down power. The synchrotron nebula has a size of 1 pc and contains
an unresolved point-like X-ray source, probably the pulsar with its wind
termination shock.Comment: A&A accepted, 9 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Ratio of energies radiated in the universe through accretive processes and nucleosynthesis
We present here a new determination of the ratio of energies radiated by
active galactic nuclei and by stars and discuss the reasons for the apparently
conflicting results found in previous studies. We conclude that the energy
radiated by accretion processes onto super massive black holes is about 1 to 5%
of the energy radiated by stars. We also estimate that the total mass accreted
on average by a super massive black hole at the centre of a typical 10^11 Msol
galaxy is of about 7 10^7 Msol.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Infrared identification of IGR J09026-4812 as a Seyfert 1 galaxy
IGR J09026-4812 was discovered by INTEGRAL in 2006 as a new hard X-ray
source. Thereafter, an observation with Chandra pinpointed a single X-ray
source within the ISGRI error circle, showing a hard spectrum, and improving
its high-energy localisation to a subarcsecond accuracy. Thus, the X-ray source
was associated to the infrared counterpart 2MASS J09023731-4813339 whose JHKs
photometry indicated a highly reddened source. The high-energy properties and
the counterpart photometry suggested a high-mass X-ray binary with a main
sequence companion star located 6.3-8.1 kpc away and with a 0.3-10 keV
luminosity of 8e34 erg/s. New optical and infrared observations were needed to
confirm the counterpart and to reveal the nature of IGR J09026-4812. We
performed optical and near infrared observations on the counterpart 2MASS
J09023731-4813339 with the ESO/NTT telescope on March 2007. We achieved
photometry and spectroscopy in near infrared wavelengths and photometry in
optical wavelengths. The accurate astrometry at both optical and near infrared
wavelengths confirmed 2MASS J09023731-4813339 to be the counterpart of IGR
J09026-4812. However, the near infrared images show that the source is
extended, thus excluding any Galactic compact source possibility. The source
spectrum shows three main emission lines identified as the HeI lambda 1.0830
micron line, and the HI Pa_beta and Pa_alpha lines, typical in galaxies with an
active galactic nucleus. The broadness of these lines reached values as large
as 4000 km/s pointing towards a type 1 Seyfert galaxy. The redshift of the
source is z=0.0391(4). Thus, the near infrared photometry and spectroscopy
allowed us to classify IGR J09026-4812 as a Seyfert galaxy of type 1.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics in pres
In-flight calibration of the INTEGRAL/IBIS mask
Since the release of the INTEGRAL Offline Scientific Analysis (OSA) software
version 9.0, the ghost busters module has been introduced in the INTEGRAL/IBIS
imaging procedure, leading to an improvement of the sensitivity around bright
sources up to a factor of 7. This module excludes in the deconvolution process
the IBIS/ISGRI detector pixels corresponding to the projection of a bright
source through mask elements affected by some defects. These defects are most
likely associated with screws and glue fixing the IBIS mask to its support.
Following these major improvements introduced in OSA 9, a second order
correction is still required to further remove the residual noise, now at a
level of 0.2-1% of the brightest source in the field of view. In order to
improve our knowledge of the IBIS mask transparency, a calibration campaign has
been carried out during 2010-2012. We present here the analysis of these data,
together with archival observations of the Crab and Cyg X-1, that allowed us to
build a composite image of the mask defects and to investigate the origin of
the residual noise in the IBIS/ISGRI images. Thanks to this study, we were able
to point out a simple modification of the ISGRI analysis software that allows
to significantly improve the quality of the images in which bright sources are
detected at the edge of the field of view. Moreover, a refinement of the area
excluded by the ghost busters module is considered, and preliminary results
show improvements to be further tested. Finally, this study indicates further
directions to be investigated for improving the ISGRI sensitivity, such as
taking into account the thickness of the screws in the mask model or studying
the possible discrepancy between the modeled and actual mask element bridges.Comment: accepted for publication in the proceedings of "An INTEGRAL view of
the high-energy sky (the first 10 years)" 9th INTEGRAL Workshop, October
15-19, 2012, Paris, France, in Proceedings of Science (INTEGRAL 2012), Eds.
A. Goldwurm, F. Lebrun and C. Winkler,
(http://pos.sissa.it/cgi-bin/reader/conf.cgi?confid=176), id 154; 6 pages, 4
figures, see the PoS website for the full resolution versio
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