974 research outputs found
Diverse Long-Term Variability of Five Candidate High-Mass X-ray Binaries from Swift Burst Alert Telescope Observations
We present an investigation of long-term modulation in the X-ray light curves
of five little-studied candidate high-mass X-ray binaries using the Swift Burst
Alert Telescope. IGR J14488-5942 and AX J1700.2-4220 show strong modulation at
periods of 49.6 and 44 days, respectively, which are interpreted as orbital
periods of Be star systems. For IGR J14488-5942, observations with Swift X-ray
Telescope show a hint of pulsations at 33.4 s. For AX J1700.2-4220, 54 s
pulsations were previously found with XMM. Swift J1816.7-1613 exhibits
complicated behavior. The strongest peak in the power spectrum is at a period
near 150 days, but this conflicts with a determination of a period of 118.5
days by La Parola et al. (2014). AX J1820.5-1434 has been proposed to exhibit
modulation near 54 days, but the extended BAT observations suggest modulation
at slightly longer than double this at approximately 111 days. There appears to
be a long-term change in the shape of the modulation near 111 days, which may
explain the apparent discrepancy. The X-ray pulsar XTE J1906+090, which was
previously proposed to be a Be star system with an orbital period of ~30 days
from pulse timing, shows peaks in the power spectrum at 81 and 173 days. The
origins of these periods are unclear, although they might be the orbital period
and a superorbital period respectively. For all five sources, the long-term
variability, together with the combination of orbital and proposed pulse
periods, suggests that the sources contain Be star mass donors.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 15 pages, 27
figures. (v2 corrects citation
Calculated intermolecular interactions in secondary chlorides
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71083/2/JCPSA6-59-9-5195-1.pd
Swift J1734.5-3027: a new long type-I X-ray bursting source
Swift J1734.5-3027 is a hard X-ray transient discovered by Swift while
undergoing an outburst in September 2013. Archival observations showed that
this source underwent a previous episode of enhanced X-ray activity in May-June
2013. In this paper we report on the analysis of all X-ray data collected
during the outburst in September 2013, the first that could be intensively
followed-up by several X-ray facilities. Our data-set includes INTEGRAL, Swift,
and XMM-Newton observations. From the timing and spectral analysis of these
observations, we show that a long type-I X-ray burst took place during the
source outburst, making Swift J1734.5-3027 a new member of the class of
bursting neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries. The burst lasted for about 1.9
ks and reached a peak flux of (6.01.8)10 erg cm
s in the 0.5-100 keV energy range. The estimated burst fluence in the
same energy range is (1.100.10)10 erg cm. By
assuming that a photospheric radius expansion took place during the first
200 s of the burst and that the accreted material was predominantly
composed by He, we derived a distance to the source of 7.21.5 kpc.Comment: Accepted for publication on A&
Discovery and evolution of the new black hole candidate Swift J1539.2-6227 during its 2008 outburst
We report on the discovery by the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer of the black
hole candidate Swift J1539.2-6227 and the subsequent course of an outburst
beginning in November 2008 and lasting at least seven months. The source was
discovered during normal observations with the Swift Burst Alert Telescope
(BAT) on 2008 November 25. An extended observing campaign with the Rossi X-Ray
Timing Explorer (RXTE) and Swift provided near-daily coverage over 176 days,
giving us a good opportunity to track the evolution of spectral and timing
parameters with fine temporal resolution through a series of spectral states.
The source was first detected in a hard state during which strong low-frequency
quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) were detected. The QPOs persisted for about
35 days and a signature of the transition from the hard to soft intermediate
states was seen in the timing data. The source entered a short-lived thermal
state about 40 days after the start of the outburst. There were variations in
spectral hardness as the source flux declined and returned to a hard state at
the end of the outburst. The progression of spectral states and the nature of
the timing features provide strong evidence that Swift J1539.2-6227 is a
candidate black hole in a low-mass X-ray binary system.Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
Long-term variability of AGN at hard X-rays
Variability at all observed wavelengths is a distinctive property of AGN.
Hard X-rays provide us with a view of the innermost regions of AGN, mostly
unbiased by absorption along the line of sight. Swift/BAT offers the unique
opportunity to follow, on time scales of days to years and with a regular
sampling, the 14-195 keV emission of the largest AGN sample available up to
date for this kind of investigation. We study the amplitude of the variations,
and their dependence on sub-class and on energy, for a sample of 110 radio
quiet and radio loud AGN selected from the BAT 58-month survey. About 80% of
the AGN in the sample are found to exhibit significant variability on months to
years time scales, radio loud sources being the most variable. The amplitude of
the variations and their energy dependence are incompatible with variability
being driven at hard X-rays by changes of the absorption column density. In
general, the variations in the 14-24 and 35-100 keV bands are well correlated,
suggesting a common origin of the variability across the BAT energy band.
However, radio quiet AGN display on average 10% larger variations at 14-24 keV
than at 35-100 keV and a softer-when-brighter behavior for most of the Seyfert
galaxies with detectable spectral variability on month time scale. In addition,
sources with harder spectra are found to be more variable than softer ones.
These properties are generally consistent with a variable power law continuum,
in flux and shape, pivoting at energies >~ 50 keV, to which a constant
reflection component is superposed. When the same time scales are considered,
the timing properties of AGN at hard X-rays are comparable to those at lower
energies, with at least some of the differences possibly ascribable to
components contributing differently in the two energy domains (e.g.,
reflection, absorption).Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Infocus Hard X-ray Telescope: Pixellated CZT Detector/Shield Performance and Flight Results
The CZT detector on the Infocus hard X-ray telescope is a pixellated
solid-state device capable of imaging spectroscopy by measuring the position
and energy of each incoming photon. The detector sits at the focal point of an
8m focal length multilayered grazing incidence X-ray mirror which has
significant effective area between 20--40 keV. The detector has an energy
resolution of 4.0keV at 32keV, and the Infocus telescope has an angular
resolution of 2.2 arcminute and a field of view of about 10 arcminutes. Infocus
flew on a balloon mission in July 2001 and observed Cygnus X-1. We present
results from laboratory testing of the detector to measure the uniformity of
response across the detector, to determine the spectral resolution, and to
perform a simple noise decomposition. We also present a hard X-ray spectrum and
image of Cygnus X-1, and measurements of the hard X-ray CZT background obtained
with the SWIN detector on Infocus.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the SPIE conference "Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation", #4851-116, Kona, Hawaii, Aug. 22-28, 2002.
12 pages, 9 figure
A Study of the 20 Day Superorbital Modulation in the High-Mass X-ray Binary IGR J16493-4348
We report on Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR), Neil Gehrels
Swift Observatory (Swift) X-ray Telescope (XRT) and Swift Burst Alert Telescope
(BAT) observations of IGR J16493-4348, a wind-fed Supergiant X-ray Binary
(SGXB) showing significant superorbital variability. From a discrete Fourier
transform of the BAT light curve, we refine its superorbital period to be
20.058 0.007 days. The BAT dynamic power spectrum and a fractional root
mean square analysis both show strong variations in the amplitude of the
superorbital modulation, but no observed changes in the period were found. The
superorbital modulation is significantly weaker between MJD 55,700 and MJD
56,300. The joint NuSTAR and XRT observations, which were performed near the
minimum and maximum of one cycle of the 20 day superorbital modulation, show
that the flux increases by more than a factor of two between superorbital
minimum and maximum. We find no significant changes in the 3-50 keV pulse
profiles between superorbital minimum and maximum, which suggests a similar
accretion regime. Modeling the pulse-phase averaged spectra we find a possible
Fe K emission line at 6.4 keV at superorbital maximum. The feature is
not significant at superorbital minimum. While we do not observe any
significant differences between the pulse-phase averaged spectral continua
apart from the overall flux change, we find that the hardness ratio near the
broad main peak of the pulse profile increases from superorbital minimum to
maximum. This suggests the spectral shape hardens with increasing luminosity.
We discuss different mechanisms that might drive the observed superorbital
modulation.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal on 2019 May 1
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