Friday, January 11, 2013

1301.2232 (J. J. M. in t Zand et al.)

A bright thermonuclear X-ray burst simultaneously observed with Chandra and RXTE    [PDF]

J. J. M. in t Zand, D. K. Galloway, H. L. Marshall, D. R. Ballantyne, P. G. Jonker, F. B. S. Paerels, D. M. Palmer, A. Patruno, N. N. Weinberg
The prototypical accretion-powered millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658 was observed simultaneously with Chandra-LETGS and RXTE-PCA near the peak of a transient outburst in November 2011. A single thermonuclear (type-I) burst was detected, the brightest yet observed by Chandra from any source, and the second-brightest observed by RXTE. We found no evidence for discrete spectral features during the burst; absorption edges have been predicted to be present in such bursts, but may require a greater degree of photospheric expansion than the rather moderate expansion seen in this event (a factor of a few). These observations provide a unique data set to study an X-ray burst over a broad bandpass and at high spectral resolution (lambda/delta-lambda=200-400). We find a significant excess of photons at high and low energies compared to the standard black body spectrum. This excess is well described by a 20-fold increase of the persistent flux during the burst. We speculate that this results from burst photons being scattered in the accretion disk corona. These and other recent observations of X-ray bursts point out the need for detailed theoretical modeling of the radiative and hydrodynamical interaction between thermonuclear X-ray bursts and accretion disks.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.2232

No comments:

Post a Comment