966 research outputs found
The 17 min orbital period in the Ultra Compact X-ray Binary 4U 0513-40
The ultracompact low-mass X-ray binary 4U 0513-40 in the globular cluster
NGC1851 exhibits large amplitude X-ray flux variations with spectral changes
from low/hard to high/soft states which have not been reported previously in
other ultracompact X-ray binaries. Using BeppoSAX, CHANDRA and XMM Newton
archival data together with recent INTEGRAL observations, we reveal a clear
sinusoidal periodic signal with a period of ~17 minutes when the source is in a
typical high/soft state with a dominant soft thermal component. The periodicity
disappears when the source is in a low/hard state and the thermal soft
component is not required any more to model the data. These properties indicate
the orbital nature of the detected signal and imply an high inclination angle
of the binary system (>80{\deg}).Comment: accepted MNRAS 201
INTEGRAL high energy behaviour of 4U 1812-12
The low mass X-ray binary system 4U 1812-12 was monitored with the INTEGRAL
observatory in the period 2003-2004 and with BeppoSAX on April 20, 2000. We
report here on the spectral and temporal analysis of both persistent and burst
emission. The full data set confirms the persistent nature of this burster, and
reveals the presence of emission up to 200 keV. The persistent spectrum is well
described by a comptonization (CompTT) model plus a soft blackbody component.
The source was observed in a hard spectral state with a 1-200 keV luminosity of
2*10^(36) ergs/s and L/LEdd~1% and no meaningful flux variation has been
revealed, as also confirmed by a 2004 RXTE observation. We have also detected 4
bursts showing double peaked profiles and blackbody spectra with temperatures
ranging from 1.9 to 3.1 keV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication by A&
Chasing extreme blazars with INTEGRAL
Within the blazar population, hard X-ray selected objects are of particular
interest as they tend to lie at each end of the blazar sequence. In particular,
flat spectrum radio quasars located at high redshifts display the most powerful
jets, the largest black hole masses and the most luminous accretion disks:
their spectral energy distribution has a Compton peak in the sub-MeV region
which favours their detection by instruments like INTEGRAL/IBIS and Swift/BAT.
These sources are even more extreme than blazars selected in other wavebands,
like, for example, the gamma-ray range explored by Fermi. Here we report on a
sample of 12 high redshift blazars detected so far by INTEGRAL, including 3
newly identified objects. Some properties of the combined IBIS/BAT sample of
high redshift blazars (z>2) are also compared to those of a similar similar
sample obtained by Fermi.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of "An INTEGRAL view of the
high-energy sky (the first 10 years)" the 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=05
XMMU J174716.1-281048: a "quasi-persistent" very faint X-ray transient?
The X-ray transient XMMU J174716.1-281048 was serendipitously discovered with
XMM-Newton in 2003. It lies about 0.9 degrees off the Galactic Centre and its
spectrum shows a high absorption (~8 x 10E22 cm^(-2)). Previous X-ray
observations of the source field performed in 2000 and 2001 did not detect the
source, indicative of a quiescent emission at least two orders of magnitude
fainter. The low luminosity during the outburst (~5 x 10E34 erg/s at 8 kpc)
indicates that the source is a member of the ``very faint X-ray transients''
class. On 2005 March 22nd the INTEGRAL satellite caught a possible type-I X-ray
burst from the new INTEGRAL source IGR J17464-2811, classified as fast X-ray
transient. This source was soon found to be positionally coincident, within the
uncertainties, with XMMU J174716.1-281048. Here we report data analysis of the
X-ray burst observed with the IBIS and JEM-X telescopes and confirm the type-I
burst nature. We also re-analysed XMM-Newton and Chandra archival observations
of the source field. We discuss the implications of these new findings,
particularly related to the source distance as well as the source
classification.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Bright X-ray bursts from 1E 1724-3045 in Terzan 2
During about 3 years wide field monitoring of the Galactic Center region by
the WFC telescopes on board the BeppoSAX satellite, a total of 14 type-I X-ray
bursts were detected from the burster 1E 1724-3045 located in the globular
cluster Terzan 2. All the observed events showed evidence for photospheric
radius expansion due to Eddington-limit burst luminosity, thus leading to an
estimate of the source distance (~7.2 kpc). Preliminary results of the analysis
of the bursts are presented.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Proc. 5th Compton Symp., Portsmouth 199
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