4,324 research outputs found
Low-luminosity X-ray sources and the Galactic ridge X-ray emission
Using the XMM-Newton Slew Survey, we construct a hard-band selected sample of
low-luminosity Galactic X-ray sources. Two source populations are represented,
namely coronally-active stars and binaries (ASBs) and cataclysmic variables
(CVs), with X-ray luminosities collectively spanning the range 10^(28-34) erg/s
(2-10 keV). We derive the 2-10 keV X-ray luminosity function (XLF) and volume
emissivity of each population. Scaled to the local stellar mass density, the
latter is found to be 1.08 +/- 0.16 x 10^28 erg/s/M and 2.5 +/- 0.6 x 10^27
erg/s/M, for the ASBs and CVs respectively, which in total is a factor 2 higher
than previous estimates. We employ the new XLFs to predict the X-ray source
counts on the Galactic plane at l = 28.5 deg and show that the result is
consistent with current observational constraints. The X-ray emission of faint,
unresolved ASBs and CVs can account for a substantial fraction of the Galactic
ridge X-ray emission (GRXE). We discuss a model in which roughly 80 per cent of
the 6-10 keV GRXE intensity is produced in this way, with the remainder
attributable to X-ray scattering in the interstellar medium and/or young
Galactic source populations. Much of the hard X-ray emission attributed to the
ASBs is likely to be produced during flaring episodes
XMM-Newton observations of the Galactic Centre Region - II: The soft thermal emission
We have extended our earlier study (Heard & Warwick 2013, Paper I) of the
X-ray emission emanating from the central 100 pc x 100 pc region of our Galaxy
to an investigation of several features prominent in the soft X-ray (2-4.5 keV)
band. We focus on three specific structures: a putative bipolar outflow from
the vicinity of Sgr A*; a high surface brightness region located roughly 12
arcmin to the north-east of Sgr A*; and a lower surface-brightness extended
loop feature seen to the south of Sgr A*. We show that all three structures are
thermal in nature and have similar temperatures (kT ~ 1 keV). The inferred
X-ray luminosities lie in the range (2 - 10) x 10^34 erg s^-1. In the case of
the bipolar feature we suggest that the hot plasma is produced by the
shock-heating of the winds from massive stars within the Central Cluster,
possibly collimated by the Circumnuclear Disc. Alternatively the outflow may be
driven by outbursts on Sgr A*, which follow tidal disruption events occurring
at a rate of roughly 1 every 4000 yr. The north-east enhancement is centred on
a candidate PWN which has a relatively hard non-thermal X-ray spectrum. We
suggest that the coincident soft-thermal emission traces the core of a new
thermal-composite supernova remnant, designated as SNR G0.13-0.12. There is no
clear evidence for an associated radio shell but such a feature may be masked
by the bright emission of the nearby Radio Arc and other filamentary
structures. SNR G0.13-0.12 is very likely interacting with the nearby molecular
cloud, G0.11-0.11, and linked to the Fermi source, 2FGL J1746.4-2851c. Finally
we explore a previous suggestion that the elliptically-shaped X-ray loop to the
south of Sgr A*, of maximum extent ~45 pc, represents the shell of a
superbubble located in the GC region. Although plausible, the interpretation of
this feature in terms a coherent physical structure awaits confirmation.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
On characterising the variability properties of X-ray light curves from active galaxies
We review some practical aspects of measuring the amplitude of variability in
`red noise' light curves typical of those from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN).
The quantities commonly used to estimate the variability amplitude in AGN light
curves, such as the fractional rms variability amplitude, F_var, and excess
variance, sigma_XS^2, are examined. Their statistical properties, relationship
to the power spectrum, and uses for investigating the nature of the variability
processes are discussed. We demonstrate that sigma_XS^2 (or similarly F_var)
shows large changes from one part of the light curve to the next, even when the
variability is produced by a stationary process. This limits the usefulness of
these estimators for quantifying differences in variability amplitude between
different sources or from epoch to epoch in one source. Some examples of the
expected scatter in the variance are tabulated for various typical power
spectral shapes, based on Monte Carlo simulations. The excess variance can be
useful for comparing the variability amplitudes of light curves in different
energy bands from the same observation. Monte Carlo simulations are used to
derive a description of the uncertainty in the amplitude expected between
different energy bands (due to measurement errors). Finally, these estimators
are used to demonstrate some variability properties of the bright Seyfert 1
galaxy Markarian 766. The source is found to show a strong, linear correlation
between rms amplitude and flux, and to show significant spectral variability.Comment: 14 pages. 12 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Galactic plane at faint X-ray fluxes - II. Stacked X-ray spectra of a sample of serendipitous XMM-Newton sources
We have investigated the X-ray spectral properties of a sample of 138 X-ray
sources detected serendipitously in observations of the Galactic
plane, at an intermediate to faint flux level. We divide our sample into 5
subgroups according to the spectral hardness of the sources, and stack (i.e.
co-add) the individual source spectra within each subgroup. As expected these
stacked spectra show a softening trend from the hardest to the softest
subgroups, which is reflected in the inferred line-of-sight column density. The
spectra of the three hardest subgroups are characterized by a hard continuum
plus superimpose Fe-line emission in the 6--7 keV bandpass. The average
equivalent width (EW) of the 6.7-keV He-like Fe-K line is
170 eV, whereas the 6.4-keV Fe-K fluorescence line from neutral
iron and the 6.9-keV H-like Fe-Ly line have EWs of 89 eV
and 81 eV respectively, i.e. roughly half that of the 6.7-keV
line. The remaining subgroups exhibit soft thermal spectra. Virtually all of
the spectrally-soft X-ray sources can be associated with relatively nearby
coronally-active late-type stars, which are evident as bright near-infrared
(NIR) objects within the X-ray error circles. On a similar basis only a
minority of the spectrally-hard X-ray sources have likely NIR identifications.
The average continuum and Fe-line properties of the spectrally-hard sources are
consistent with those of magnetic cataclysmic variables but the direct
identification of large numbers of such systems in Galactic X-ray surveys,
probing intermediate to faint flux levels, remains challenging.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray spectral complexity in narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies
We present a systematic analysis of the X-ray spectral properties of a sample
of 22 ``narrow-line'' Seyfert 1 galaxies for which data are available from the
ASCA public archive. Many of these sources, which were selected on the basis of
their relatively narrow H-beta line width (FWHM <= 2000 km/s), show significant
spectral complexity in the X-ray band. Their measured hard power-law continua
have photon indices spanning the range 1.6 - 2.5 with a mean of 2.1, which is
only slightly steeper than the norm for ``broad-line'' Seyfert 1s. All but four
of the sources exhibit a soft excess, which can be modelled as blackbody
emission (T_{bb} ~ 100 - 300 eV) superposed on the underlying power-law. This
soft component is often so strong that, even in the relatively hard bandpass of
ASCA, it contains a significant fraction, if not the bulk, of the X-ray
luminosity, apparently ruling out models in which the soft excess is produced
entirely through reprocessing of the hard continuum.
Most notably, 6 of the 22 objects show evidence for a broad absorption
feature centred in the energy range 1.1 - 1.4 keV, which could be the signature
of resonance absorption in highly ionized material. A further 3 sources exhibit
``warm absorption'' edges in the 0.7 - 0.9 keV bandpass. Remarkably, all 9
``absorbed'' sources have H-beta line widths below 1000 km/s, which is less
than the median value for the sample taken as a whole. This tendency for very
narrow line widths to correlate with the presence of ionized absorption
features in the soft X-ray spectra of NLS1s, if confirmed in larger samples,
may provide a further clue in the puzzle of active galactic nuclei.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The XMM-Newton slew survey in the 2-10 keV band
The XMM-Newton Slew Survey (XSS) covers a significant fraction of the sky in
a broad X-ray bandpass. Although shallow by contemporary standards, in the
`classical' 2-10 keV band of X-ray astronomy, the XSS provides significantly
better sensitivity than any currently available all-sky survey. We investigate
the source content of the XSS, focussing on detections in the 2-10 keV band
down to a very low threshold (> 4 counts net of background). At the faint end,
the survey reaches a flux sensitivity of roughly 3e-12 erg/cm2/s (2-10 keV).
Our starting point was a sample of 487 sources detected in the XMMSL1d2 XSS at
high galactic latitude in the hard band. Through cross-correlation with
published source catalogues from surveys spanning the electromagnetic spectrum
from radio to gamma-rays, we find that 45% of the sources have likely
identifications with normal/active galaxies, 18% are associated with other
classes of X-ray object (nearby coronally active stars, accreting binaries,
clusters of galaxies), leaving 37% of the XSS sources with no current
identification. We go on to define an XSS extragalactic hard band sample
comprised of 219 galaxies and active galaxies. We investigate the properties of
this extragalactic sample including its X-ray logN-logS distribution. We find
that in the low-count limit, the XSS is strongly affected by Eddington bias.
There is also a very strong bias in the XSS against the detection of extended
sources, most notably clusters of galaxies. A significant fraction of the
detections at and around the low-count limit may be spurious. Nevertheless, it
is possible to use the XSS to extract a reasonably robust sample of
extragalactic sources, excluding galaxy clusters. The differential logN-logS
relation of these extragalactic sources matches very well to the HEAO-1 A2
all-sky survey measurements at bright fluxes and to the 2XMM source counts at
the faint end.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, FITS table of XSS extragalactic sample
available from http://www.star.le.ac.uk/~amr30/Slew
X 1908+075: An X-ray Binary with a 4.4 day Period
X 1908+075 is an optically unidentified and highly absorbed X-ray source that
appears in early surveys such as Uhuru, OSO-7, Ariel V, HEAO-1, and the EXOSAT
Galactic Plane Survey. These surveys measured a source intensity in the range
of 2-12 mCrab at 2-10 keV, and the position was localized to ~ 0.5 degrees. We
use the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) All Sky Monitor (ASM) to confirm our
expectation that a particular Einstein IPC detection (1E 1908.4+0730) provides
the correct position for X 1908+075. The analysis of the coded mask shadows
from the ASM for the position of 1E 1908.4+0730 yields a persistent intensity ~
8 mCrab (1.5-12 keV) over a 3 year interval beginning in 1996 February.
Furthermore, we detect a period of 4.400 +- 0.001 days with a false alarm
probability < 1.0e-7 . The folded light curve is roughly sinusoidal, with an
amplitude that is 22 % of the mean flux. The X-ray period may be attributed to
the scattering and absorption of X-rays through a stellar wind combined with
the orbital motion in a binary system. We suggest that X 1908+075 is an X-ray
binary with a high mass companion star.Comment: 6 pages, two-column,"emulateapj" style, submitted to Ap
- …