Type II bursts are thought to arise from instabilities in the accretion flow
onto a neutron star in an X-ray binary. Despite having been known for almost 40
years, no model can yet satisfactorily account for all their properties. To
shed light on the nature of this phenomenon and provide a reference for future
theoretical work, we study the entire sample of Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
data of type II bursts from the Rapid Burster (MXB 1730-335). We find that type
II bursts are Eddington-limited in flux, that a larger amount of energy goes in
the bursts than in the persistent emission, that type II bursts can be as short
as 0.130 s, and that the distribution of recurrence times drops abruptly below
15-18 s. We highlight the complicated feedback between type II bursts and the
NS surface thermonuclear explosions known as type I bursts, and between type II
bursts and the persistent emission. We review a number of models for type II
bursts. While no model can reproduce all the observed burst properties and
explain the source uniqueness, models involving a gating role for the magnetic
field come closest to matching the properties of our sample. The uniqueness of
the source may be explained by a special combination of magnetic field
strength, stellar spin period and alignment between the magnetic field and the
spin axis.Comment: Accepted 2015 February 12. Received 2015 February 10; in original
form 2014 December 1