235 research outputs found
ESO Very Large Telescope optical spectroscopy of BL Lacertae objects. II. New redshifts, featureless objects, and classification assessments
We report on ESO Very Large Telescope optical spectroscopy of 42 BL Lacertae
objects of unknown redshift. Nuclear emission lines were observed in 12
objects, while for another six we detected absorption features due to their
host galaxy. The new high S/N spectra therefore allow us to measure the
redshift of 18 sources. Five of the observed objects were reclassified either
as stars or quasars, and one is of uncertain nature. For the remaining 18 the
optical spectra appear without intrinsic features in spite of our ability to
measure rather faint (EW nearly 0.1 Angstrom) spectral lines. For the latter
sources a lower limit to the redshift was set exploiting the very fact that the
absorption lines of the host galaxy are undetected on the observed spectra.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication on A
There is a short gamma-ray burst prompt phase at the beginning of each long one
We compare the prompt intrinsic spectral properties of a sample of short
Gamma--ray Burst (GRB) with the first 0.3 seconds (rest frame) of long GRBs
observed by Fermi/GBM. We find that short GRBs and the first part of long GRBs
lie on the same E_p--E_iso correlation, that is parallel to the relation for
the time averaged spectra of long GRBs. Moreover, they are indistinguishable in
the E_p--L_iso plane. This suggests that the emission mechanism is the same for
short and for the beginning of long events, and both short and long GRBs are
very similar phenomena, occurring on different timescales. If the central
engine of a long GRB would stop after ~0.3 * (1+z) seconds the resulting event
would be spectrally indistinguishable from a short GRB.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepte
Timing accuracy of the Swift X-Ray Telescope in WT mode
The X-Ray Telescope (XRT) on board Swift was mainly designed to provide
detailed position, timing and spectroscopic information on Gamma-Ray Burst
(GRB) afterglows. During the mission lifetime the fraction of observing time
allocated to other types of source has been steadily increased. In this paper,
we report on the results of the in-flight calibration of the timing
capabilities of the XRT in Windowed Timing read-out mode. We use observations
of the Crab pulsar to evaluate the accuracy of the pulse period determination
by comparing the values obtained by the XRT timing analysis with the values
derived from radio monitoring. We also check the absolute time reconstruction
measuring the phase position of the main peak in the Crab profile and comparing
it both with the value reported in literature and with the result that we
obtain from a simultaneous Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) observation. We
find that the accuracy in period determination for the Crab pulsar is of the
order of a few picoseconds for the observation with the largest data time span.
The absolute time reconstruction, measured using the position of the Crab main
peak, shows that the main peak anticipates the phase of the position reported
in literature for RXTE by ~270 microseconds on average (~150 microseconds when
data are reduced with the attitude file corrected with the UVOT data). The
analysis of the simultaneous Swift-XRT and RXTE Proportional Counter Array
(PCA) observations confirms that the XRT Crab profile leads the PCA profile by
~200 microseconds. The analysis of XRT Photodiode mode data and BAT event data
shows a main peak position in good agreement with the RXTE, suggesting the
discrepancy observed in XRT data in Windowed Timing mode is likely due to a
systematic offset in the time assignment for this XRT read out mode.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication on
Astronomy&Astrophysic
A complete sample of bright Swift short Gamma-Ray Bursts
We present a carefully selected sample of short gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs)
observed by the Swift satellite up to June 2013. Inspired by the criteria we
used to build a similar sample of bright long GRBs (the BAT6 sample), we
selected SGRBs with favorable observing conditions for the redshift
determination on ground, ending up with a sample of 36 events, almost half of
which with a redshift measure. The redshift completeness increases up to about
70% (with an average redshift value of z = 0.85) by restricting to those events
that are bright in the 15-150 keV Swift Burst Alert Telescope energy band. Such
flux-limited sample minimizes any redshift-related selection effects, and can
provide a robust base for the study of the energetics, redshift distribution
and environment of the Swift bright population of SGRBs. For all the events of
the sample we derived the prompt and afterglow emission in both the observer
and (when possible) rest frame and tested the consistency with the correlations
valid for long GRBs. The redshift and intrinsic X-ray absorbing column density
distributions we obtain are consistent with the scenario of SGRBs originated by
the coalescence of compact objects in primordial binaries, with a possible
minor contribution (~10%-25%) of binaries formed by dynamical capture (or
experiencing large natal kicks). This sample is expected to significantly
increase with further years of Swift activity.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Searching for supergiant fast X-ray transients with Swift
Supergiant fast X-ray transients (SFXTs) are high mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs)
hosting a neutron star and an OB supergiant companion. We examine the available
Swift data, as well as other new or archival/serendipitous data, on three
sources: IGR J17407-2808, 2XMM J185114.3-000004, and IGR J18175-2419, whose
X-ray characteristics qualify them as candidate SFXT, in order to explore their
properties and test whether they are consistent with an SFXT nature. As IGR
J17407-2808 and 2XMM J185114.3-000004 triggered the Burst Alert Telescope on
board Swift, the Swift data allow us to provide their first arcsecond
localisations, leading to an unequivocal identification of the source CXOU
J174042.0-280724 as the soft X-ray counterpart of IGR J17407-2808, as well as
their first broadband spectra, which can be fit with models generally
describing accreting neutron stars in HMXBs. While still lacking optical
spectroscopy to assess the spectral type of the companion, we propose 2XMM
J185114.3-000004 as a very strong SFXT candidate. The nature of IGR J17407-2808
remains, instead, more uncertain. Its broad band properties cannot exclude that
the emission originates from either a HMXB (and in that case, a SFXT) or, more
likely, a low mass X-ray binary. Finally, based on the deep non-detection in
our XRT monitoring campaign and a careful reanalysis of the original Integral
data in which the discovery of the source was first reported, we show that IGR
J18175-2419 is likely a spurious detection.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 12 pages, 11
figures, 6 table
BL Lacertae identifications in a ROSAT-selected sample of Fermi unidentified objects
The optical spectroscopic followup of 27 sources belonging to a sample of 30
high-energy objects selected by positionally cross correlating the first
Fermi/LAT Catalog and the ROSAT All-Sky Survey Bright Source Catalog is
presented here. It has been found or confirmed that 25 of them are BL Lacertae
objects (BL Lacs), while the remaining two are Galactic cataclysmic variables
(CVs). This strongly suggests that the sources in the first group are
responsible for the GeV emission detected with Fermi, while the two CVs most
likely represent spurious associations. We thus find an 80% a posteriori
probability that the sources selected by matching GeV and X-ray catalogs belong
to the BL Lac class. We also show suggestions that the BL Lacs selected with
this approach are probably high-synchrotron-peaked sources and in turn good
candidates for the detection of ultra-high-energy (TeV) photons from them.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, one appendix, accepted for publication
on A&A, main journal. Tables 1-3 and Figures 2-6 will only be published in
the electronic edition of the journa
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