80 research outputs found
Neutral absorber dips in the periodic burster LMXB XB 1323-619 from Suzaku
We present results of an observation with Suzaku of the dipping, periodic
bursting low mass X-ray binary XB 1323-619. Using the energy band 0.8 - 70 keV,
we show that the source spectrum is well-described as the emission of an
extended accretion disk corona, plus a small contribution of blackbody emission
from the neutron star. The dip spectrum is well-fitted by the progressive
covering model in which the extended ADC is progressively overlapped by the
absorbing bulge of low ionization state in the outer accretion disk and that
dipping is basically due to photoelectric absorption in the bulge. An
energy-independent decrease of flux at high energies (20 - 70 keV) is shown to
be consistent with the level of Thomson scattering expected in the bulge. An
absorption feature at 6.67 keV (Fe XXV) is detected in the non-dip spectrum and
other possible weak features. In dipping, absorption lines of medium and highly
ionized states are seen suggestive of absorption in the ADC but there is no
evidence that the lines are stronger than in non-dip. We show that the
luminosity of the source has changed substantially since the Exosat observation
of 1985, increasing in luminosity between 1985 and 2003, then in 2003 - 2007
falling to the initial low value. X-ray bursting has again become periodic,
which it ceased to do in its highest luminosity state, and we find that the
X-ray bursts exhibit both the fast decay and later slow decay characteristic of
the rp burning process. We present arguments against the recent proposal that
the decrease of continuum flux in the dipping LMXB in general can be explained
as absorption in an ionized absorber rather than in the bulge in the outer disk
generally accepted to be the site of absorption.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics in pres
Boundary layer emission and Z-track in the color-color diagram of luminous LMXBs
We demonstrate that Fourier-frequency resolved spectra of atoll and Z-
sources are identical, despite significant difference in their average spectra
and luminosity (by a factor of ~10-20). This result fits in the picture we
suggested earlier, namely that the f> 1 Hz variability in luminous LMXBs is
primarily due to variations of the boundary layer luminosity. In this picture
the frequency resolved spectrum equals the boundary layer spectrum, which
therefore can be straightforwardly determnined from the data. The obtained so
boundary layer spectrum is well approximated by the saturated Comptonization
model, its high energy cut-off follows kT~2.4 keV black body. Its independence
on the global mass accretion rate lends support to the theoretical suggestion
by Inogamov &Sunyaev (1999) that the boundary layer is radiation pressure
supported. With this assumption we constrain the gravity on the neutron star
surface and its mass and radius. Equipped with the knowledge of the boundary
layer spectrum we attempt to relate the motion along the Z-track to changes of
physically meaningful parameters. Our results suggest that the contribution of
the boundary layer to the observed emission decreases along the Z-track from
conventional ~50% on the horizontal branch to a rather small number on the
normal branch. This decrease can be caused, for example, by obscuration of the
boundary layer by the geometrically thick accretion disk at Mdot ~ Mdot_Edd.
Alternatively, this can indicate significant change of the structure of the
accretion flow at Mdot ~ Mdot_ Edd and disappearance of the boundary layer as a
distinct region of the significant energy release associated with the neutron
star surface.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, Accepted in A&
Is there a compact companion orbiting the late O-type binary star HD 164816?
We present a multi-wavelength (X-ray, -ray, optical and radio) study
of HD 194816, a late O-type X-ray detected spectroscopic binary. X-ray spectra
are analyzed and the X-ray photon arrival times are checked for pulsation. In
addition, newly obtained optical spectroscopic monitoring data on HD 164816 are
presented. They are complemented by available radio data from several large
scale surveys as well as the \emph{FERMI} -ray data from its
\emph{Large Area Telescope}. We report the detection of a low energy excess in
the X-ray spectrum that can be described by a simple absorbed blackbody model
with a temperature of 50 eV as well as a 9.78 s pulsation of the X-ray
source. The soft X-ray excess, the X-ray pulsation, and the kinematical age
would all be consistent with a compact object like a neutron star as companion
to HD 164816. The size of the soft X-ray excess emitting area is consistent
with a circular region with a radius of about 7 km, typical for neutron stars,
while the emission measure of the remaining harder emission is typical for late
O-type single or binary stars. If HD 164816 includes a neutron star born in a
supernova, this supernova should have been very recent and should have given
the system a kick, which is consistent with the observation that the star HD
164816 has a significantly different radial velocity than the cluster mean. In
addition we confirm the binarity of HD 164816 itself by obtaining an orbital
period of 3.82 d, projected masses = 2.355(69) M,
= 2.103(62) M apparently seen at low inclination
angle, determined from high-resolution optical spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS, 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
The Discovery of a State Dependent Hard Tail in the X-ray Spectrum of the Luminous Z-source GX 17+2
We report results of a BeppoSAX (0.1-200 keV) observation of the Z-type low
mass X-ray binary GX 17+2. The source was on the so-called Horizontal and
Normal branches. Energy spectra were selected based on the source position in
the X-ray hardness-intensity diagram. The continuum could be fairly well
described by the sum of a ~0.6 keV blackbody, contributing ~10% of the observed
0.1-200 keV flux, and a Comptonized component, resulting from upscattering of
\~1 keV seed photons by an electron cloud with temperature of ~3 keV and
optical depth of ~10. Iron K-line and edge were also present at energies 6.7
and 8.5 keV, respectively. In the spectra of the Horizontal branch a hard tail
was clearly detected at energies above ~30 keV. It could be fit by a power law
of photon index ~2.7, contributing ~8% of the source flux. This component
gradually faded as the source moved towards the Normal branch, where it was no
longer detectable. We discuss the possible origin of this component and the
similarities with the spectra of Atoll sources and black hole X-ray binaries.Comment: 11 pages, including 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
Discovery of type-I X-ray bursts from the low-mass X-ray binary 4U 1708-40
We report the discovery of type-I X-ray bursts from the low-mass X-ray binary
4U 1708-40 during the 100 ks observation performed by BeppoSAX on 1999 August
15-16. Six X-ray bursts have been observed. The unabsorbed 2-10 keV fluxes of
the bursts range from ~ (3-9)x10^(-10) erg cm^(-2)s^(-1). A correlation between
peak flux and fluence of the bursts is found, in agreement with the behaviour
observed in other similar sources. There is a trend of the burst flux to
increase with the time interval from the previous burst. From the value of the
persistent flux we infer a mass accretion rate Mdot~7x10^(-11) Msun/yr, that
may correspond to the mixed hydrogen/helium burning regime triggered by
thermally unstable hydrogen. We have also analysed a BeppoSAX observation
performed on 2001 August 22 and previous RXTE observations of 4U 1708-40, where
no bursts have been observed; we found persistent fluxes of more than a factor
of 7 higher than the persistent flux observed during the BeppoSAX observation
showing X-ray bursts.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Discovery of X-ray burst triplets in EXO 0748-676
[Abridged] Type-I X-ray bursts are thermonuclear flashes that take place on
the surface of accreting neutron stars. The wait time between consecutive
bursts is set by the time required to accumulate the fuel needed to trigger a
new burst; this is at least one hour. Sometimes secondary bursts are observed,
approximately 10 min after the main burst. These short wait-time bursts are not
yet understood. We observed the low-mass X-ray binary and X-ray burster EXO
0748-676 with XMM-Newton for 158 h, during 7 uninterrupted observations lasting
up to 30 h each. We detect 76 X-ray bursts. Most remarkably, 15 of these bursts
occur in burst triplets, with wait times of 12 min between the three components
of the triplet. We also detect 14 doublets with similar wait times between the
two components of the doublet. The characteristics of the bursts indicate that
possibly all bursts in this system are hydrogen-ignited, in contrast with most
other frequent X-ray bursters in which bursts are helium-ignited, but
consistent with the low mass accretion rate in EXO 0748-676. Possibly the
hydrogen ignition is the determining factor for the occurrence of short
wait-time bursts.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Optical design and performance simulations for the 1.49 keV beamline of the BEaTriX X-ray facility
The BEaTriX (Beam Expander Testing X-ray) facility, now operational at INAF-Brera Astronomical Observatory, will represent a cornerstone in the acceptance roadmap of Silicon Pore Optics (SPO) mirror modules, and will so contribute to the final angular resolution of the ATHENA X-ray telescope. By expansion and collimation of a microfocus X-ray source via a paraboloidal mirror, a monochromation stage, and an asymmetric crystal, BEaTriX enables the full-aperture illumination of an SPO mirror module with a parallel, monochromatic, and broad (140 mm Ă 60 mm) X-ray beam. The beam then propagates in a 12 m vacuum range to image the point spread function of the mirror module, directly on a focal plane camera. Currently the 4.51 keV beamline, based on silicon crystals, is operational in BEaTriX. A second beamline at 1.49 keV, which requires a separate paraboloidal mirror and organic crystals (ADP) for beam expansion, is being realized. As for monochromators, the current design is based on asymmetric quartz crystals. In this paper, we show the current optical design of the 1.49 keV beamline and the optical simulations carried out to predict the achievable performances in terms of beam collimation, intensity, and uniformity. In the next future, the simulation activity will allow us to determine manufacturing and alignment tolerances for the optical components
Rapid X-ray variability in Galactic black hole candidates
The rapid X-ray variability of galactic accreting black-hole candidates is compared to that of accreting neutron stars with low magnetic fields. The power spectra of these objects can be described in terms of a small number of simple power spectral shapes: power law noise, band limited noise, and quasi-periodic oscillations (QPO). In a given source, the properties of these power spectral components seem to depend, to first order, only on mass flux. Similarities in the power spectral properties between source types strongly suggest that similar physical mechanisms underlie power spectral components seen in black-hole candidates and in neutron stars with various magnetic-field strengths. Two rapid (âł 1 Hz) QPO and two band limited noise components appear to occur across all types of X-ray binaries; the situation with respect to the ubiquitous power law components, as well as with respect to slow (âČ1 Hz) QPO is as yet unclear. One QPO and one band limited noise component appear to be magnetospheric as they are not seen in black-hole candidates and atoll sources (which are inferred to be neutron stars with a very low magnetic field). Another QPO and band limited noise component may be related to the presence of an inner, radiation pressure dominated accretion disk, as they do not occur in X-ray pulsars. It is discussed to what extent the relatively small quantitative differences between the rapid X-ray variability properties of neutron stars and black-hole candidates can be used to identify black holes, and whether there exist any qualitative differences (i.e., black hole signatures) in the rapid X-ray variability
X-ray tests of the ATHENA mirror modules in BEaTriX: from design to reality
The BEaTriX (Beam Expander Testing X-ray) facility is now operative at the INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico Brera (Merate, Italy). This facility has been specifically designed and built for the X-ray acceptance tests (PSF and Effective Area) of the ATHENA Silicon Pore Optics (SPO) Mirror Modules (MM). The unique setup creates a parallel, monochromatic, large X-ray beam, that fully illuminates the aperture of the MMs, generating an image at the ATHENA focal length of 12 m. This is made possible by a microfocus X-ray source followed by a chain of optical components (a paraboloidal mirror, 2 channel cut monochromators, and an asymmetric silicon crystal) able to expand the X-ray beam to a 6 cm Ă 17 cm size with a residual divergence of 1.5 arcsec (vertical) Ă 2.5 arcsec (horizontal). This paper reports the commissioning of the 4.5 keV beam line, and the first light obtained with a Mirror Module
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