36 research outputs found
BeppoSAX-WFC monitoring of the Galactic Center region
We review the results obtained with the Galactic center campaigns of the
BeppoSAX Wide Field X-ray Cameras (WFCs). This pertains to the study of
luminous low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs). When pointed at the Galactic center,
the WFC field of view contains more than half of the Galactic LMXB population.
The results exemplify the excellent WFC capability to detect brief X-ray
transients. Firstly, the WFCs expanded the known population of Galactic
thermonuclear X-ray bursters by 50%. At least half of all LMXBs are now
established to burst and, thus, to contain a neutron star as compact accretor
rather than a black hole candidate. We provide a complete list of all 76
currently known bursters, including the new case 1RXS J170854.4-321857.
Secondly, the WFCs have uncovered a population of weak transients with peak
luminosities up to ~10^37 erg/s and durations from days to weeks. One is the
first accretion-powered millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658. Thirdly, the WFCs
contributed considerably towards establishing that nearly all (12 out of 13)
luminous low-mass X-ray binaries in Galactic globular clusters contain neutron
stars rather than black holes. Thus, the neutron star to black hole ratio in
clusters differs from that in the Galactic disk at a marginal confidence level
of 97%.Comment: 10 pages 6 figures, to appear in Proc. "The Restless High-Energy
Universe" (2nd BeppoSAX Symposium), eds. E.P.J. van den Heuvel, J.J.M. in 't
Zand & R.A.M.J. Wijers, Nucl. Instrum. Meth. B Suppl. Se
The Corrected Log N-Log Fluence Distribution of Cosmological Gamma-Ray Bursts
Recent analysis of relativistically expanding shells of cosmological
gamma-ray bursts has shown that if the bursts are cosmological, then most
likely total energy (E_0) is standard and not peak luminosity (L_0). Assuming a
flat Friedmann cosmology (q_o = 1/2, Lambda = 0) and constant rate density
(rho_0) of bursting sources, we fit a standard candle energy to a uniformly
selected log N-log S in the BATSE 3B catalog correcting for fluence efficiency
and averaging over 48 observed spectral shapes. We find the data consistent
with E_0 = 7.3^{+0.7}_{-1.0} X 10^{51} ergs and discuss implications of this
energy for cosmological models of gamma-ray bursts.Comment: A five page LateX file that uses the Revtex conference proceedings
macro aipbook.sty, and includes three postscript figures using psfig. To Be
published in the Proceedings of the Third Hunstville Symposium on Gamma-Ray
Bursts, eds. C. Kouveliotou, M.S. Briggs and G.J. Fishman (New York:AIP).
Postscript version availible at http://nis-www.lanl.gov/~jsbloom/LOG_S.p
X-ray Bursts from the Accreting Millisecond Pulsar XTE J1814-338
Since the discovery of the accreting millisecond pulsar XTE J1814-338 a total
of 27 thermonuclear bursts have been observed from the source with the
Proportional Counter Array (PCA) onboard the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
(RXTE). Spectroscopy of the bursts, as well as the presence of continuous burst
oscillations, suggests that all but one of the bursts are sub-Eddington. The
remaining burst has the largest peak bolometric flux of 2.64 x E^-8
erg/sec/cm^2, as well as a gap in the burst oscillations, similar to that seen
in Eddington limited bursts from other sources. Assuming this burst was
Eddington limited we obtain a source distance of about 8 kpc. All the bursts
show coherent oscillations at the 314.4 Hz spin frequency. The burst
oscillations are strongly frequency and phase locked to the persistent
pulsations. Only two bursts show evidence for frequency drift in the first few
seconds following burst onset. In both cases the initial drift corresponds to a
spin down of a few tenths of a Hz. The large oscillation amplitude during the
bursts confirms that the burst flux is modulated at the spin frequency. We
detect, for the first time, a significant first harmonic component in burst
oscillations. The ratio of countrate in the first harmonic to that in the
fundamental can be > 0.25 and is, on average, less than that of the persistent
pulsations. If the pulsations result from a single bright region on the
surface, the harmonic strength suggests the burst emission is beamed, perhaps
due to a stronger magnetic field than in non-pulsing LMXBs. Alternatively, the
harmonic content could result from a geometry with two bright regions.Comment: AASTeX, 15 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Prompt and Afterglow Emission Properties of Gamma-Ray Bursts with Spectroscopically Identified Supernovae
We present a detailed spectral analysis of the prompt and afterglow emission
of four nearby long-soft gamma-ray bursts (GRBs 980425, 030329, 031203, and
060218) that were spectroscopically found to be associated with type Ic
supernovae, and compare them to the general GRB population. For each event, we
investigate the spectral and luminosity evolution, and estimate the total
energy budget based upon broadband observations. The observational inventory
for these events has become rich enough to allow estimates of their energy
content in relativistic and sub-relativistic form. The result is a global
portrait of the effects of the physical processes responsible for producing
long-soft GRBs. In particular, we find that the values of the energy released
in mildly relativistic outflows appears to have a significantly smaller scatter
than those found in highly relativistic ejecta. This is consistent with a
picture in which the energy released inside the progenitor star is roughly
standard, while the fraction of that energy that ends up in highly relativistic
ejecta outside the star can vary dramatically between different events.Comment: 55 pages including 23 figures and 8 tables. Accepted for publication
in ApJ. Replaced with the accepted versio
Dense matter with eXTP
In this White Paper we present the potential of the Enhanced X-ray Timing and
Polarimetry (eXTP) mission for determining the nature of dense matter; neutron
star cores host an extreme density regime which cannot be replicated in a
terrestrial laboratory. The tightest statistical constraints on the dense
matter equation of state will come from pulse profile modelling of
accretion-powered pulsars, burst oscillation sources, and rotation-powered
pulsars. Additional constraints will derive from spin measurements, burst
spectra, and properties of the accretion flows in the vicinity of the neutron
star. Under development by an international Consortium led by the Institute of
High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Science, the eXTP mission is
expected to be launched in the mid 2020s.Comment: Accepted for publication on Sci. China Phys. Mech. Astron. (2019