2,715 research outputs found
A Striking Confluence Between Theory and Observations of High-Mass X-ray Binary Pulsars
We analyse the most powerful X-ray outbursts from neutron stars in ten
Magellanic high-mass X-ray binaries and three pulsating ultraluminous X-ray
sources. Most of the outbursts rise to which is about the level of
the Eddington luminosity, while the rest and more powerful outbursts also
appear to recognize that limit when their emissions are assumed to be
anisotropic and beamed toward our direction. We use the measurements of pulsar
spin periods and their derivatives to calculate the X-ray
luminosities in their faintest accreting ("propeller") states. In four
cases with unknown , we use the lowest observed X-ray luminosities,
which only adds to the heterogeneity of the sample. Then we calculate the
ratios and we obtain an outstanding confluence of theory and
observations from which we conclude that work done on both fronts is accurate
and the results are trustworthy: sources known to reside on the lowest
Magellanic propeller line are all located on/near that line, whereas other
sources jump higher and reach higher-lying propeller lines. These jumps can be
interpreted in only one way, higher-lying pulsars have stronger surface
magnetic fields in agreement with empirical results in which and
values were not used.Comment: Added LMC X-4 and commented on the cyclotron absorption line of SMC
X-2. 4 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, submitted to MNRAS
The Great Pretenders Among the ULX Class
The recent discoveries of pulsed X-ray emission from three ultraluminous
X-ray (ULX) sources have finally enabled us to recognize a subclass within the
ULX class: the great pretenders, neutron stars (NSs) that appear to emit X-ray
radiation at isotropic luminosities ~erg~s~erg~s only because their emissions are strongly beamed toward
our direction and our sight lines are offset by only a few degrees from their
magnetic-dipole axes. The three known pretenders appear to be stronger emitters
than the presumed black holes of the ULX class, such as Holmberg II \& IX X-1,
IC10 X-1, and NGC300 X-1. For these three NSs, we have adopted a single
reasonable assumption, that their brightest observed outbursts unfold at the
Eddington rate, and we have calculated both their propeller states and their
surface magnetic-field magnitudes. We find that the results are not at all
different from those recently obtained for the Magellanic Be/X-ray pulsars: the
three NSs reveal modest magnetic fields of about 0.3-0.4~TG and beamed
propeller-line X-ray luminosities of ~erg~s,
substantially below the Eddington limit.Comment: To appear in Research in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Optical studies of two LMC X-ray transients : RX J0544.1-7100 and RX J0520.5-6932
We report observations which confirm the identities of the optical
counterpart to the transient sources RX J0544.1-7100 and RX J0520.5-6932. The
counterparts are suggested to be a B-type stars. Optical data from the
observations carried out at ESO and SAAO, together with results from the OGLE
data base, are presented. In addition, X-ray data from the RXTE all-sky monitor
are investigated for long term periodicities. A strong suggestion for a binary
period of 24.4d is seen in RX J0520.5-6932 from the OGLE data.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
An ultrahigh-speed digitizer for the Harvard College Observatory astronomical plates
A machine capable of digitizing two 8 inch by 10 inch (203 mm by 254 mm)
glass astrophotographic plates or a single 14 inch by 17 inch (356 mm by 432
mm) plate at a resolution of 11 microns per pixel or 2309 dots per inch (dpi)
in 92 seconds is described. The purpose of the machine is to digitize the
\~500,000 plate collection of the Harvard College Observatory in a five year
time frame. The digitization must meet the requirements for scientific work in
astrometry, photometry, and archival preservation of the plates. This paper
describes the requirements for and the design of the subsystems of the machine
that was developed specifically for this task.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 1 table; presented at SPIE (July, 2006) and
published in Proceeding
The H1 Forward Track Detector at HERA II
In order to maintain efficient tracking in the forward region of H1 after the
luminosity upgrade of the HERA machine, the H1 Forward Track Detector was also
upgraded. While much of the original software and techniques used for the HERA
I phase could be reused, the software for pattern recognition was completely
rewritten. This, along with several other improvements in hit finding and
high-level track reconstruction, are described in detail together with a
summary of the performance of the detector.Comment: Minor revision requested by journal (JINST) edito
Retrograde Accretion Discs in High-Mass Be/X-Ray Binaries
We have compiled a comprehensive library of all X-ray observations of Magellanic pulsars carried out by XMM-Newton, Chandra and RXTE in the period 1997-2014. In this work, we use the data from 53 high-mass Be/X-ray binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud to demonstrate that the distribution of spin-period derivatives versus spin periods of spinning-down pulsars is not at all different from that of the accreting spinning-up pulsars. The inescapable conclusion is that the up and down samples were drawn from the same continuous parent population; therefore, Be/X-ray pulsars that are spinning down over periods spanning 18 yr are, in fact, accreting from retrograde discs. The presence of prograde and retrograde discs in roughly equal numbers supports a new evolutionary scenario for Be/X-ray pulsars in their spin period-period derivative diagram
Not an Oxymoron: Some X-Ray Binary Pulsars with Enormous Spin-Up Rates Reveal Weak Magnetic Fields
Three high-mass X-ray binaries have been discovered recently exhibiting enormous spin-up rates. Conventional accretion theory predicts extremely high-surface dipolar magnetic fields that we believe are unphysical. Instead, we propose quite the opposite scenario; some of these pulsars exhibit weak magnetic fields, so much so that their magnetospheres are crushed by the weight of inflowing matter. The enormous spin-up rate is achieved before inflowing matter reaches the pulsar's surface as the penetrating inner disc transfers its excess angular momentum to the receding magnetosphere, which, in turn, applies a powerful spin-up torque to the pulsar. This mechanism also works in reverse; it spins a pulsar down when the magnetosphere expands beyond corotation and finds itself rotating faster than the accretion disc, which then exerts a powerful retarding torque to the magnetic field and to the pulsar itself. The above scenaria cannot be accommodated within the context of neutron-star accretion processes occurring near spin equilibrium, thus they constitute a step towards a new theory of extreme (far from equilibrium) accretion phenomena
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