Broad band X-ray spectra of short bursts from SGR 1900+14


Abstract in English

We report on the X-ray spectral properties of 10 short bursts from SGR1900+14 observed with the Narrow Field Instruments onboard BeppoSAX in the hours following the intermediate flare of 2001 April 18. Burst durations are typically shorter than 1 s, and often show significant temporal structure on time scales as short as $sim$10 ms. Burst spectra from the MECS and PDS instruments were fit across an energy range from 1.5 to above 100 keV. We fit several spectral models and assumed Nh values smaller than 5$times 10^{22}$ cm$^{-2}$, as derived from observations in the persistent emission. Our results show that the widely used optically thin thermal bremsstrahlung law provides acceptable spectral fits for energies higher than 15 keV, but severely overestimated the flux at lower energies. Similar behavior had been observed several years ago in short bursts from SGR 1806-20, suggesting that the rollover of the spectrum at low energies is a universal property of this class of sources. Alternative spectral models - such as two blackbodies or a cut-off power law - provide significantly better fits to the broad band spectral data, and show that all the ten bursts have spectra consistent with the same spectral shape.

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