77 research outputs found
Infrared Candidates for the Intense Galactic X-ray Source GX 17+2
We present new astrometric solutions and infrared Hubble Space Telescope
observations of GX 17+2 (X1813-140), one of the brightest X-ray sources on the
celestial sphere. Despite 30 years of intensive study, and the existence of a
strong radio counterpart with a sub-arcsecond position, the object remains
optically unidentified. The observed X-ray characteristics strongly suggest
that it is a so-called "Z-source," the rare but important category that
includes Sco X-1 and Cyg X-2. Use of the USNO-A2.0 catalog enables us to
measure the position of optical and infrared objects near the radio source to
sub-arcsecond precision within the International Celestial Reference Frame, for
direct comparison with the radio position, which we also recompute using modern
calibrators. With high confidence we eliminate the V~17.5 star NP Ser, often
listed as the probable optical counterpart of the X-ray source, as a candidate.
Our HST NICMOS observations show two faint objects within our 0.5" radius 90%
confidence error circle. Even the brighter of the two, Star A, is far fainter
than expected (H~19.8), given multiple estimates of the extinction in this
field and our previous understanding of Z sources, but it becomes the best
candidate for the counterpart of GX 17+2. The probability of a chance
coincidence of an unrelated faint object on the radio position is high.
However, if the true counterpart is not Star A, it is fainter still, and our
conclusion that the optical counterpart is surprisingly underluminous is but
strengthened.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journa
Systematic variation in the apparent burning area of thermonuclear bursts and its implication for neutron star radius measurement
Precision measurements of neutron star radii can provide a powerful probe of
the properties of cold matter beyond nuclear density. Beginning in the late
1970s it was proposed that the radius could be obtained from the apparent or
inferred emitting area during the decay portions of thermonuclear (type I)
X-ray bursts. However, this apparent area is generally not constant, preventing
reliable measurement of the source radius. Here we report for the first time a
correlation between the variation of the inferred area and the burst
properties, measured in a sample of almost 900 bursts from 43 sources. We found
that the rate of change of the inferred area during decay is anticorrelated
with the burst decay duration. A Spearman rank correlation test shows that this
relation is significant at the <10^{-45} level for our entire sample, and at
the 7x10^{-37} level for the 625 bursts without photospheric radius expansion.
This anticorrelation is also highly significant for individual sources
exhibiting a wide range of burst durations, such as 4U 1636-536 and Aql X-1. We
suggest that variations in the colour factor, which relates the colour
temperature resulted from the scattering in the neutron star atmosphere to the
effective temperature of the burning layer, may explain the correlation. This
in turn implies significant variations in the composition of the atmosphere
between bursts with long and short durations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Models of Type I X-ray Bursts from GS 1826-24: A Probe of rp-Process Hydrogen Burning
The X-ray burster GS 1826-24 shows extremely regular Type I X-ray bursts
whose energetics and recurrence times agree well with thermonuclear ignition
models. We present calculations of sequences of burst lightcurves using
multizone models which follow the rp-process nucleosynthesis with an extensive
nuclear reaction network. The theoretical and observed burst lightcurves show
remarkable agreement. The models naturally explain the slow ~5s rise and long
~100s tails of these bursts, as well as their dependence on mass accretion
rate. This comparison provides further evidence for solar metallicity in the
accreted material in this source, and constrains the distance to the source.
The main difference is that the observed lightcurves do not show the distinct
two-stage rise of the models. This may reflect the time for burning to spread
over the stellar surface, or may indicate that our treatment of heat transport
or nuclear physics needs to be revised. The trends in burst properties with
accretion rate are well-reproduced by our spherically symmetric models which
include chemical and thermal inertia from the ashes of previous bursts. Changes
in the covering fraction of the accreted fuel are not required.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in ApJ letter
A comparison of neutron star blackbody luminosities in LMXB with the theory of accretion flow spreading on the stellar surface
We present a comparison of the results of the ASCA survey of LMXB with the
Inogamov and Sunyaev theory of accretion flow spreading on the surface of
neutron stars. The ASCA survey of LMXB of Church and Balucinska-Church (2001)
revealed a systematic variation of the luminosity of blackbody emission from
the neutron star spanning 3 decades in total X-ray luminosity suggesting that
the level of blackbody emission is controlled by the physics of the inner
disk/stellar interface, which we can hope to understand. Two types of
explanation exist: firstly that there is radial flow between the inner disk and
star at all vertical positions above the orbital plane so that the height of
the disk directly determines the area of star emitting. Secondly, the height of
the emitting region on the star is not directly related to the disk properties
but depends on the mass accretion rate as suggested by Inogamov and Sunyaev
(1999) in their theory of accretion flow spreading on the stellar surface. We
find that the survey results for the emitting area agree with this theory at
the lowest luminosities. However, for higher luminosities, the blackbody
emission is stronger than predicted by spreading theory suggesting that the
emitting area is controlled by radial flow between disk and star.Comment: 8 pages, 6 ps figures; Astron. and Astrophysics in pres
A four-hours long burst from Serpens X-1
During a serendipitous observation of the BeppoSAX Wide Field Cameras, a very
long Type I X-ray burst was observed from the low mass X-ray binary Serpens
X-1. The burst lasted for approximately 4 hours and had an exponential decay
time of 69+/-2 min (2-28 keV). The bolometric peak-luminosity is
(1.6+/-0.2)x10^38 erg/s and the fluence (7.3+/-1.4)x10^41 erg. The first
'normal' Type I burst was observed 34 days after the superburst. This is in
rough agreement with recent predictions for unstable carbon burning in a heavy
element ocean.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication by A&
A Two-Zone Model for Type I X-ray Bursts on Accreting Neutron Stars
We construct a two-zone model to describe H and He burning on the surface of
an accreting neutron star and use it to study the triggering of type I X-ray
bursts. Although highly simplified, the model reproduces all of the bursting
regimes seen in the more complete global linear stability analysis of Narayan &
Heyl (2003), including the regime of delayed mixed bursts. The results are also
consistent with observations of type I X-ray bursts. At accretion rates Mdot <
0.1 Mdot_Edd, thermonuclear He burning via the well-known thin-shell thermal
instability triggers bursts. As Mdot increases, however, the trigger mechanism
evolves from the fast thermal instability to a slowly growing overstability
involving both H and He burning. The competition between nuclear heating via
the beta-limited CNO cycle and the triple-alpha process on the one hand, and
radiative cooling via photon diffusion and emission on the other hand, drives
oscillations with a period approximately equal to the H-burning timescale. If
these oscillations grow, the gradually rising temperature at the base of the
helium layer eventually provokes a thin-shell thermal instability and hence a
delayed mixed burst. For Mdot > 0.25 Mdot_Edd, there is no instability or
overstability, and there are no bursts. Nearly all other theoretical models
predict that bursts should occur for all Mdot < Mdot_Edd, in conflict with both
our results and observations. We suggest that this discrepancy arises from the
assumed strength of the hot CNO cycle breakout reaction 15O(alpha,gamma)19Ne in
these other models. That observations agree much better with the results of
Narayan & Heyl and our two-zone model, both of which neglect breakout
reactions, may imply that the true 15O(alpha,gamma)19Ne cross section is much
smaller than assumed in previous investigations.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
A very rare triple-peaked type-I X-ray burst in the low-mass X-ray binary 4U 1636-53
We have discovered a triple-peaked X-ray burst from the low-mass X-ray binary
(LMXB) 4U 1636-53 with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). This is the
first triple-peaked burst reported from any LMXB using RXTE, and it is only the
second burst of this kind observed from any source. (The previous one was also
from 4U 1636-53, and was observed with EXOSAT.) From fits to time-resolved
spectra, we find that this is not a radius-expansion burst, and that the same
triple-peaked pattern seen in the X-ray light curve is also present in the
bolometric light curve of the burst. Similar to what was previously observed in
double-peaked bursts from this source, the radius of the emitting area
increases steadily during the burst, with short periods in between during which
the radius remains more or less constant. The temperature first increases
steeply, and then decreases across the burst also showing three peaks. The
first and last peak in the temperature profile occur, respectively,
significantly before and significantly after the first and last peaks in the
X-ray and bolometric light curves. We found no significant oscillations during
this burst. This triple-peaked burst, as well as the one observed with EXOSAT
and the double-peak bursts in this source, all took place when 4U 1636-53
occupied a relatively narrow region in the colour-colour diagram, corresponding
to a relatively high (inferred) mass-accretion rate. No model presently
available is able to explain the multiple-peaked bursts.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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