3,571 research outputs found
A BeppoSAX observation of the supersoft source 1E 0035.4-7230
Results from a 37,000 s BeppoSAX Low-Energy Concentrator Spectrometer (LECS)
observation of the supersoft source SMC 13 (=1E 0035.4-7230) in the Small
Magellanic Cloud are reported. The BeppoSAX spectrum is fitted either with a
blackbody spectrum with an effective temperature kT = 26-58 eV, an LTE white
dwarf atmosphere spectrum with kT = 35-50 eV, or a non-LTE white dwarf
atmosphere spectrum with kT = 25-32 eV. The bolometric luminosity is < 8 10^37
erg s-1 and < 3 10^37 erg s^-1 for the LTE and the non-LTE spectrum. We also
applied a spectral fit to combined spectra obtained with BeppoSAX LECS and with
ROSAT PSPC. The kT derived for the non-LTE spectrum is 27-29 eV, the bolometric
luminosity is 1.1-1.2 10^37 erg s^-1. We can exclude any spectrally hard
component with a luminosity > 2 10^35 erg s^-1 (for a bremmstrahlung with a
temperature of 0.5 keV) at a distance of 60 kpc. The LTE temperature is
therefore in the range 5.5+/-0.2 10^5 K and the non-LTE temperature in the
range 3.25+/-0.16 10^5 K. Assuming the source is on the stability line for
atmospheric nuclear burning, we constrain the white dwarf mass from the LTE and
the non-LTE fit to ~1.1 M-solar and ~0.9 M-solar respectively. However, the
temperature and luminosity derived with the non-LTE model for 1E 0035.4-7230 is
consistent with a lower mass M~0.6-0.7 M-solar white dwarf as predicted by Sion
and Starrfield (1994). At the moment, neither of these two alternatives for the
white dwarf mass can be excluded.Comment: 6 pages, accepted by A&A March 30th 199
Luminous supersoft X-ray emission from the recurrent nova U Scorpii
BeppoSAX detected luminous 0.2-2.0 keV supersoft X-ray emission from the
recurrent nova U Sco ~19-20 days after the peak of the optical outburst in
February 1999. U Sco is the first recurrent nova to be observed during a
luminous supersoft X-ray phase. Non-LTE white dwarf atmosphere spectral models
(together with a ~0.5 keV optically thin thermal component) were fitted to the
BeppoSAX spectrum. We find that the fit is acceptable assuming enriched He and
an enhanced N/C ratio. This implies that the CNO cycle was active during the
outburst, in agreement with a thermonuclear runaway scenario. The best-fit
temperature is ~9 10^5 K and the bolometric luminosity those predicted for
steady nuclear burning on a WD close to the Chandrasekhar mass. The fact that
U~Sco was detected as a supersoft X-ray source is consistent with steady
nuclear burning continuing for at least one month after the outburst. This
means that only a fraction of the previously accreted H and He was ejected
during the outburst and that the WD can grow in mass, ultimately reaching the
Chandrasekhar limit. This makes U~Sco a candidate type Ia supernova progenitor.Comment: 4 pages, accepted by A&A Letters 15 June 199
BeppoSAX LECS background subtraction techniques
We present 3 methods for the subtraction of non-cosmic and unresolved cosmic
backgrounds observed by the Low-Energy Concentrator Spectrometer (LECS)
on-board BeppoSAX. Removal of these backgrounds allows a more accurate modeling
of the spectral data from point and small-scale extended sources. At high
(>|25| degree) galactic latitudes, subtraction using a standard background
spectrum works well. At low galactic latitudes, or in complex regions of the
X-ray sky, two alternative methods are presented. The first uses counts
obtained from two semi-annuli near the outside of the LECS field of view to
estimate the background at the source location. The second method uses ROSAT
Position Sensitive Proportional Counter (PSPC) all-sky survey data to estimate
the LECS background spectrum for a given pointing position. A comparison of the
results from these methods provides an estimate of the systematic
uncertainties. For high galactic latitude fields, all 3 methods give 3 sigma
confidence uncertainties of <0.9 10^-3 count/s (0.1-10 keV), or <1.5 10^-3
count/s (0.1-2 keV). These correspond to 0.1-2.0 keV fluxes of 0.7-1.8 and
0.5-1.1 10^-13 erg/cm2/s for a power-law spectrum with a photon index of 2 and
photoelectric absorption of 3 10^20 and 3 10^21 atom/cm2, respectively. At low
galactic latitudes, or in complex regions of the X-ray sky, the uncertainties
are a factor ~2.5 higher.Comment: 13 pages. Accepted for publication in A&A
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