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IGRJ17361-4441: a possible new accreting X-ray binary in NGC6388

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 Added by Enrico Bozzo
 Publication date 2011
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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IGRJ17361-4441 is a newly discovered INTEGRAL hard X-ray transient, located in the globular cluster NGC6388. We report here the results of the X-ray and radio observations performed with Swift, INTEGRAL, RXTE, and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) after the discovery of the source on 2011 August 11. In the X-ray domain, IGRJ17361-4441 showed virtually constant flux and spectral parameters up to 18 days from the onset of the outburst. The broad-band (0.5-100 keV) spectrum of the source could be reasonably well described by using an absorbed power-law component with a high energy cut-off (N_Hsimeq0.8x10^(22) cm^(-2), {Gamma}simeq0.7-1.0, and E_cutsimeq25 keV) and displayed some evidence of a soft component below sim2 keV. No coherent timing features were found in the RXTE data. The ATCA observation did not detect significant radio emission from IGRJ17361-4441, and provided the most stringent upper limit (rms 14.1 {mu}Jy at 5.5 GHz) to date on the presence of any radio source close to the NGC6388 center of gravity. The improved position of IGRJ17361-4441 in outburst determined from a recent target of opportunity observation with Chandra, together with the X-ray flux and radio upper limits measured in the direction of the source, argue against its association with the putative intermediate-mass black hole residing in the globular cluster and with the general hypothesis that the INTEGRAL source is a black hole candidate. IGRJ17361-4441 might be more likely a new X-ray binary hosting an accreting neutron star. The ATCA radio non-detection also permits us to derive an upper limit to the mass of the suspected intermediate massive black hole in NGC6388 of <600 Modot. This is a factor of 2.5 lower than the limit reported previously.



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103 - A. Sanna , A. Papitto , L. Burderi 2016
We report on the discovery of coherent pulsations at a period of 2.9 ms from the X-ray transient MAXI J0911-655 in the globular cluster NGC 2808. We observed X-ray pulsations at a frequency of $sim339.97$ Hz in three different observations of the source performed with XMM-Newton and NuSTAR during the source outburst. This newly discovered accreting millisecond pulsar is part of an ultra-compact binary system characterised by an orbital period of $44.3$ minutes and a projected semi-major axis of $sim17.6$ lt-ms. Based on the mass function we estimate a minimum companion mass of 0.024 M$_{odot}$, which assumes a neutron star mass of 1.4 M$_{odot}$ and a maximum inclination angle of $75^{circ}$ (derived from the lack of eclipses and dips in the light-curve of the source). We find that the companion stars Roche-Lobe could either be filled by a hot ($5times 10^{6}$ K) pure helium white dwarf with a 0.028 M$_{odot}$ mass (implying $isimeq58^{circ}$) or an old (>5 Gyr) brown dwarf with metallicity abundances between solar/sub-solar and mass ranging in the interval 0.065$-$0.085 M$_{odot}$ (16 < $i$ < 21). During the outburst the broad-band energy spectra are well described by a superposition of a weak black-body component (kT$sim$ 0.5 keV) and a hard cutoff power-law with photon index $Gamma sim$ 1.7 and cut-off at a temperature kT$_esim$ 130 keV. Up to the latest Swift-XRT observation performed on 2016 July 19 the source has been observed in outburst for almost 150 days, which makes MAXI J0911-655 the second accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar with outburst duration longer than 100 days.
73 - A. J. Goodwin 2019
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119 - Arash Bahramian 2014
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