Supergiant fast X-ray transients are a new class of high mass X-ray binaries
recently discovered with INTEGRAL. Hours long outbursts from these sources have
been observed on numerous occasions at luminosities of ~1E36-1E37 erg/s,
whereas their low level activity at ~1E32-1E34 erg/s has not been deeply
investigated yet due to the paucity of long pointed observations with high
sensitivity X-ray telescopes. Here we report on the first long (~32 ks) pointed
XMM-Newton observation of IGR J16479-4514, a member of this new class. This
observation was carried out in March 2008, shortly after an outburst from this
source, with the main goal of investigating its low level emission and physical
mechanisms that drive the source activity. Results from the timing, spectral
and spatial analysis of the EPIC-PN XMM-Newton observation show that the X-ray
source IGRJ16479-4514 underwent an episode of sudden obscuration, possibly an
X-ray eclipse by the supergiant companion. We also found evidence for a soft
X-ray extended halo around the source that is most readily interpreted as due
to scattering by dust along the line of sight to IGRJ16479-4514. We discuss
this result in the context of the gated accretion scenarios that have been
proposed to interpret the behaviour of supergiant fast X-ray transient.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS letter. 6 pages and 5 figures. We
updated one reference and the acknowledgment