757 research outputs found
Swift J004427.3-734801- a probable Be/white dwarf system in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Swift J004427.3-734801 is an X-ray source in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC)
that was first discovered as part of the Swift S-CUBED programme in January
2020. It was not detected in any of the previous 3 years worth of observations.
The accurate positional determination from the X-ray data have permitted an
optical counterpart to be identified which has the characteristics of an
O9V-B2III star. Evidence for the presence of an IR excess and significant
I-band variability strongly suggest that this is an OBe type star. Over 17
years worth of optical monitoring by the OGLE project reveal periods of time in
which quasi-periodic optical flares occur at intervals of ~21.5d. The X-ray
data obtained from the S-CUBED project reveal a very soft spectrum, too soft to
be that from accretion on to a neutron star or black hole. It is suggested here
that this a rarely identified Be star-white dwarf binary in the SMC.Comment: 6 Pages, 8 Figures. Accepted by MNRAS 2020 June 8. Received 2020 June
5; in original form 2020 April 2
The two INTEGRAL X-ray transients IGR J17091--3624 and IGR J17098--3628: a multi-wavelength long term campaign
IGR J17091-3624 and IGR J17098-3628 are two X-ray transients discovered by
INTEGRAL and classified as possible black hole candidates (BHCs). We present
here the results obtained from the analysis of multi-wavelength data sets
collected by different instruments from 2005 until the end of 2007 on both
sources. IGR J17098-3628 has been regularly detected by INTEGRAL and RXTE over
the entire period of the observational campaign; it was also observed with
pointed observations by XMM and Swift/XRT in 2005 and 2006 and exhibited flux
variations not linked with the change of any particular spectral features. IGR
J17091-3624 was initially in quiescence (after a period of activity between
2003 April and 2004 April) and it was then detected again in outburst in the
XRT field of view during a Swift observation of IGR J17098--3628 on 2007 July
9. The observations during quiescence provide an upper limit to the 0.2-10 keV
luminosity, while the observations in outburst cover the transition from the
hard to the soft state. Moreover, we obtain a refined X-ray position for IGR
J17091-3624 from the Swift/XRT observations during the outburst in 2007. The
new position is inconsistent with the previously proposed radio counterpart. We
identify in VLA archive data a compact radio source consistent with the new
X-ray position and propose it as the radio counterpart of the X-ray transient.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Swift monitoring of the new accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar IGRJ17511-3057 in outburst
A new accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar, IGR J17511-3057, was discovered in
outburst on 2009 September 12 during the INTEGRAL Galactic bulge monitoring
programme. To study the evolution of the source X-ray flux and spectral
properties during the outburst, we requested a Swift monitoring of
IGRJ17511-3057. In this paper we report on the results of the first two weeks
of monitoring the source. The persistent emission of IGR J17511-3057 during the
outburst is modeled well with an absorbed blackbody (kT~0.9 keV) and a
power-law component (photon index~1-2), similar to what has been observed from
other previously known millisecond pulsars. Swift also detected three type-I
Xray bursts from this source. By assuming that the peak luminosity of these
bursts is equal to the Eddington value for a pure helium type-I X-ray burst, we
derived an upper limit to the source distance of ~10 kpc. The theoretical,
expected recurrence time of the bursts according to the helium burst hypothesis
is 0.2-0.9 days, in agreement with the observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters. V2: corrected some typos and
added one referenc
Monitoring Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients with Swift. Rise to the outburst in IGR J16479-4514
IGR J16479-4514 is a Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient (SFXT), a new class of
High Mass X-ray Binaries, whose number is rapidly growing thanks to the
observations of the Galactic plane performed with the INTEGRAL satellite. IGR
J16479-4514 has been regularly monitored with Swift/XRT since November 2007, to
study the quiescent emission, the outburst properties and their recurrence. A
new bright outburst, reaching fluxes above 10 erg cm s,
was caught by the Swift/BAT.
Swift immediately re-pointed at the target with the narrow-field instruments
so that, for the first time, an outburst from a SFXT where a periodicity in the
outburst recurrence is unknown could be observed simultaneously in the 0.2--150
keV energy band. The X-ray emission is highly variable and spans almost four
orders of magnitude in count rate during the Swift/XRT observations covering a
few days before and after the bright peak. The X-ray spectrum in outburst is
hard and highly absorbed. The power-law fit resulted in a photon index of
0.98, and in an absorbing column density of
cm. These observations demonstrate that in this source (similarly to
what was observed during the 2007 outburst from the periodic SFXT IGR
J11215-5952), the accretion phase lasts much longer than a few hours.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astrophysical Journal Letters. 5 pages, 4
figure
Swift/XRT orbital monitoring of the candidate supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR J17354-3255
We report on the Swift/X-ray Telescope (XRT) monitoring of the field of view
around the candidate supergiant fast X-ray transient (SFXT) IGR J17354-3255,
which is positionally associated with the AGILE/GRID gamma-ray transient AGL
J1734-3310. Our observations, which cover 11 days for a total on-source
exposure of about 24 ks, span 1.2 orbital periods (P_orb=8.4474 d) and are the
first sensitive monitoring of this source in the soft X-rays. These new data
allow us to exploit the timing variability properties of the sources in the
field to unambiguously identify the soft X-ray counterpart of IGR J17354-3255.
The soft X-ray light curve shows a moderate orbital modulation and a dip. We
investigated the nature of the dip by comparing the X-ray light curve with the
prediction of the Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion theory, assuming both
spherical and nonspherical symmetry of the outflow from the donor star. We
found that the dip cannot be explained with the X-ray orbital modulation. We
propose that an eclipse or the onset of a gated mechanism is the most likely
explanation for the observed light curve.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 9 page
On the X-ray variability of magnetar 1RXS J170849.0-400910
We present a long-term X-ray flux and spectral analysis for 1RXS
J170849.0-400910 using Swift/XRT spanning over 8 years from 2005-2013. We also
analyze two observations from Chandra and XMM in the period from 2003-2004. In
this 10-yr period, 1RXS J170849.0-400910 displayed several rotational glitches.
Previous studies have claimed variations in the X-ray emission associated with
some of the glitches. From our analysis we find no evidence for significant
X-ray flux variations and evidence for only low-level spectral variations. We
also present an updated timing solution for 1RXS J170849.0-400910, from RXTE
and Swift observations, which includes a previously unreported glitch at MJD
56019. We discuss the frequency and implications of radiatively quiet glitches
in magnetars.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Giant outburst from the supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR J17544-2619: accretion from a transient disc?
Supergiant fast X-ray transients (SFXTs) are high mass X-ray binaries
associated with OB supergiant companions and characterised by an X-ray flaring
behaviour whose dynamical range reaches 5 orders of magnitude on timescales of
a few hundred to thousands of seconds. Current investigations concentrate on
finding possible mechanisms to inhibit accretion in SFXTs and explain their
unusually low average X-ray luminosity. We present the Swift observations of an
exceptionally bright outburst displayed by the SFXT IGR J17544-2619 on 2014
October 10 when the source achieved a peak luminosity of erg
s. This extends the total source dynamic range to 10, the
largest (by a factor of 10) recorded so far from an SFXT. Tentative evidence
for pulsations at a period of 11.6 s is also reported. We show that these
observations challenge, for the first time, the maximum theoretical luminosity
achievable by an SFXT and propose that this giant outburst was due to the
formation of a transient accretion disc around the compact object.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters. 5
pages, 5 figures, 2 table
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