52 research outputs found
X-ray observations of VY Scl type nova-like binaries in the high and low state
Four VY Scl-type nova-like systems were observed in X-rays during both the
low and the high optical states. We examined Chandra, ROSAT, Swift and Suzaku
archival observations of BZ Cam, MV Lyr, TT Ari, and V794 Aql. The X-ray flux
of BZ Cam is higher during the low state, but there is no supersoft X-ray
source (SSS) as hypothesized in previous articles. No SSS was detected in the
low state of the any of the other systems, with the X-ray flux decreasing by a
factor between 2 and 50. The best fit to the Swift X-ray spectra is obtained
with a multi-component model of plasma in collisional ionization equilibrium.
The high state high resolution spectra of TT Ari taken with Chandra ACIS-S and
the HETG gratings show a rich emission line spectrum, with prominent lines of
in Mg, Si, Ne, and S. The complexity of this spectrum seems to have origin in
more than one region, or more than one single physical mechanism. While several
emission lines are consistent with a cooling flow in an accretion stream, there
is at least an additional component. We discuss the origin of this component,
which is probably arising in a wind from the system. We also examine the
possibility that the VY Scl systems may be intermediate polars, and that while
the boundary layer of the accretion disk emits only in the extreme ultraviolet,
part of the X-ray flux may be due to magnetically driven accretion.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication by MNRA
X-Ray Observations of VY Scl-Type Nova-Like Binaries in the High and Low State
Four VY Scl-type nova-like systems were observed in X-rays both during the low and the high optical states. They are BZ Cam, MV Lyr, TT Ari, and V794 Aql. Using archival ROSAT, Swift and SUZAKU observations we found that the X-ray flux for BZ Cam is higher during the low state, but there is no supersoft X-ray source (SSS) that would indicate the thermonuclear burning predicted in a previous article. The X-ray flux is lower by a factor 2–10 in the low than the high state in other systems, and does not reflect the drop in ˙M inferred from optical and UV data. The best fit model for the X-ray spectra is a collisionally ionized plasma model. The X-ray flux may originate in a shocked wind or in accretion onto polar caps in intermediate polar systems that continues even during the low state
Constraining the Accretion Geometry of the Intermediate Polar EX Hya Using NuSTAR, Swift, and Chandra Observations
In magnetically accreting white dwarfs, the height above the white dwarf surface where the standing shock is formed is intimately related with the accretion rate and the white dwarf mass. However, it is difficult to measure. We obtained new data with NuSTAR and Swift that, together with archival Chandra data, allow us to constrain the height of the shock in the intermediate polar EX Hya. We conclude that the shock has to form at least at a distance of about one white dwarf radius from the surface in order to explain the weak Fe Kα 6.4 keV line, the absence of a reflection hump in the high-energy continuum, and the energy dependence of the white dwarf spin pulsed fraction. Additionally, the NuSTAR data allowed us to measure the true, uncontaminated hard X-ray (12-40 keV) flux, whose measurement was contaminated by the nearby galaxy cluster Abell 3528 in non-imaging X-ray instruments.Fil: Luna, Gerardo Juan Manuel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciónes Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio. - Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Astronomía y Física del Espacio; ArgentinaFil: Mukai, K.. National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Estados UnidosFil: Orio, M.. Università di Padova; ItaliaFil: Zemko, P.. Università di Padova; Itali
V4743 Sgr, a magnetic nova?
Two XMM Newton observations of Nova V4743 Sgr (Nova Sgr 2002) were performed
shortly after it returned to quiescence, 2 and 3.5 years after the explosion.
The X-ray light curves revealed a modulation with a frequency of ~0.75 mHz,
indicating that V4743 Sgr is most probably an intermediate polar (IP). The
X-ray spectra have characteristics in common with known IPs, with a hard
thermal plasma component that can be fitted only assuming a partially covering
absorber. In 2004 the X-ray spectrum had also a supersoft blackbody-like
component, whose temperature was close to that of the white dwarf (WD) in the
supersoft X-ray phase following the outburst, but with flux by at least two
orders of magnitude lower. In quiescent IPs, a soft X-ray flux component
originates at times in the polar regions irradiated by an accretion column, but
the supersoft component of V4743 Sgr disappeared in 2006, indicating a possible
origin different from accretion. We suggest that it may have been due to an
atmospheric temperature gradient on the WD surface, or to continuing localized
thermonuclear burning at the bottom of the envelope, before complete turn-off.
An optical spectrum obtained with SALT 11.5 years after the outburst showed a
prominent He II 4686A line and the Bowen blend, which reveal a very hot region,
but with peak temperature shifted to the ultraviolet (UV) range. V4743 Sgr is
the third post-outburst nova and IP candidate showing a low-luminosity
supersoft component in the X-ray flux a few years after the outburst.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted to MNRA
Optical observations of "hot" novae returning to quiescence
We have monitored the return to quiescence of novae previously observed in
outburst as supersoft X-ray sources, with optical photometry of the
intermediate polar (IP) V4743 Sgr and candidate IP V2491 Cyg, and optical
spectroscopy of these two and seven other systems. Our sample includes
classical and recurrent novae, short period (few hours), intermediate period
(1-2 days) and long period (symbiotic) binaries. The light curves of V4743 Sgr
and V2491 Cyg present clear periodic modulations. For V4743 Sgr, the modulation
occurs with the beat of the rotational and orbital periods. If the period
measured for V2491 Cyg is also the beat of these two periods, the orbital one
should be almost 17 hours. The recurrent nova T Pyx already shows fragmentation
of the nebular shell less than 3 years after the outburst. While this nova
still had strong [OIII] at this post-outburst epoch, these lines had already
faded after 3 to 7 years in all the others. We did not find any difference in
the ratio of equivalent widths of high ionization/excitation lines to that of
the Hbeta line in novae with short and long orbital period, indicating that
irradiation does not trigger high mass transfer rate from secondaries with
small orbital separation. An important difference between the spectra of RS Oph
and V3890 Sgr and those of many symbiotic persistent supersoft sources is the
absence of forbidden coronal lines. With the X-rays turn-off, we interpret this
as an indication that mass transfer in symbiotics recurrent novae is
intermittent.Comment: In press in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Multiwavelength observations of V407 Lupi (ASASSN-16kt) --- a very fast nova erupting in an intermediate polar
We present a detailed study of the 2016 eruption of nova V407 Lupi (ASASSN-16kt), including optical, near-infrared, X-ray, and ultraviolet data from SALT, SMARTS, SOAR, Chandra, Swift, and XMM-Newton. Timing analysis of the multiwavelength light-curves shows that, from 168 days post-eruption and for the duration of the X-ray supersoft source phase, two periods at 565 s and 3.57 h are detected. We suggest that these are the rotational period of the white dwarf and the orbital period of the binary, respectively, and that the system is likely to be an intermediate polar. The optical light-curve decline was very fast ( 2.9 d), suggesting that the white dwarf is likely massive ( M). The optical spectra obtained during the X-ray supersoft source phase exhibit narrow, complex, and moving emission lines of He II, also characteristics of magnetic cataclysmic variables. The optical and X-ray data show evidence for accretion resumption while the X-ray supersoft source is still on, possibly extending its duration
SMSS J130522.47-293113.0: A high-latitude stellar X-ray source with pc-scale outflow relics?
We report the discovery of an unusual stellar system SMSS J130522.47-293113.0. The optical spectrum is dominated by a blue continuum together with emission lines of hydrogen, neutral, and ionized helium, and the NIII, CIII blend at ~4640-4650 Å. The emission-line profiles vary in strength and position on time-scales as short as 1 d, while optical photometry reveals fluctuations of as much as ~0.2mag in g on time-scales as short as 10-15 min. The system is a weak X-ray source (f 0.3-10 = (1.2 ± 0.1) × 10 -13 ergs cm 2 s -1 in the 0.3-10 keV band) but is not detected at radio wavelengths (3s upper limit of 50 µJy at 5.5 GHz). The most intriguing property of the system, however, is the existence of two 'blobs', a few arcsec in size, that are symmetrically located 3'. 8 (2.2 pc for our preferred system distance of ~2 kpc) each side of the central object. The blobs are detected in optical and near-IR broad-band images but do not show any excess emission in Ha images. We discuss the interpretation of the system, suggesting that the central object is most likely a nova-like CV, and that the blobs are relics of a pc-scale accretion-powered collimated outflow
High-statistics measurement of Collins and Sivers asymmetries for transversely polarised deuterons
New results are presented on a high-statistics measurement of Collins and
Sivers asymmetries of charged hadrons produced in deep inelastic scattering of
muons on a transversely polarised LiD target. The data were taken in 2022
with the COMPASS spectrometer using the 160 \gevv\ muon beam at CERN, balancing
the existing data on transversely polarised proton targets. The first results
from about two-thirds of the new data have total uncertainties smaller by up to
a factor of three compared to the previous deuteron measurements. Using all the
COMPASS proton and deuteron results, both the transversity and the Sivers
distribution functions of the and quark, as well as the tensor charge
in the measured -range are extracted. In particular, the accuracy of the
quark results is significantly improved
Triangle Singularity as the Origin of the a1(1420)
The COMPASS Collaboration experiment recently discovered a new isovector resonancelike signal with axial-vector quantum numbers, the a(1)(1420), decaying to f(0)(980)(pi). With a mass too close to and a width smaller than the axial-vector ground state a(1)(1260), it was immediately interpreted as a new light exotic meson, similar to the X, Y, Z states in the hidden-charm sector. We show that a resonancelike signal fully matching the experimental data is produced by the decay of the a(1) (1260) resonance into K* (-> K pi) (K) over bar and subsequent rescattering through a triangle singularity into the coupled f(0)(980)p channel. The amplitude for this process is calculated using a new approach based on dispersion relations. The triangle-singularity model is fitted to the partial-wave data of the COMPASS experiment. Despite having fewer parameters, this fit shows a slightly better quality than the one using a resonance hypothesis and thus eliminates the need for an additional resonance in order to describe the data. We thereby demonstrate for the first time in the lightmeson sector that a resonancelike structure in the experimental data can be described by rescattering through a triangle singularity, providing evidence for a genuine three-body effect
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