1,309 research outputs found
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&
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
Burst-properties as a function of mass accretion rate in GX 3+1
GX 3+1 is a low-mass X-ray binary that is persistently bright since its
discovery in 1964. It was found to be an X-ray burster twenty years ago proving
that the compact object in this system is a neutron star. The burst rate is so
low that only 18 bursts were reported prior to 1996. The Wide Field Cameras on
BeppoSAX have, through a dedicated monitoring program on the Galactic center
region, increased the number of X-ray bursts from GX 3+1 by 61. Since GX 3+1
exhibits a slow (order of years) modulation in the persistent flux of about
50%, these observations opens up the unique possibility to study burst
properties as a function of mass accretion rate for very low burst rates. This
is the first time that bursts are detected from GX 3+1 in the high state. From
the analysis we learn that all bursts are short with e-folding decay times
smaller than 10 s. Therefore, all bursts are due to unstable helium burning.
Furthermore, the burst rate drops sixfold in a fairly narrow range of 2-20 keV
flux; we discuss possible origins for this.Comment: 9 pages and 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
A new bursting X-ray transient: SAX J1750.8-2900
We have analysed in detail the discovery measurements of the X-ray burster
SAX J1750.8-2900 by the Wide Field Cameras on board BeppoSAX in spring 1997, at
a position ~1.2 degrees off the Galactic Centre. The source was in outburst on
March 13th when the first observation started and showed X-ray emission for ~ 2
weeks. A total of 9 bursts were detected, with peak intensities varying from ~
0.4 to 1.0 Crab in the 2-10 keV range. Most bursts showed a fast rise time (~
1s), an exponential decay profile with e-folding time of ~ 5s, spectral
softening during decay, and a spectrum which is consistent with few keV
blackbody radiation. These features identify them as type-I X-ray bursts of
thermonuclear origin. The presence of type-I bursts and the source position
close to the Galactic Centre favours the classification of this object as a
neutron star low mass X-ray binary. X-ray emission from SAX J1750.8-2900 was
not detected in the previous and subsequent Galactic bulge monitoring, and the
source was never seen bursting again.Comment: 13 pages, 3 Postscript figures, aaspp4 styl
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