No Arabic abstract
We report results from the first simultaneous X-ray (RXTE) and optical (SAAO) observations of the low-mass X-ray binary GS 1826-24 in June 1998. A type-I burst was detected in both X-ray and optical wavelengths. Its energy-dependent profile, energetics and spectral evolution provide evidence for an increase in the X-ray but not fpr photospheric radius expansion. However, we may still derive an upper limit for its distance of $7.5pm0.5$ kpc, assuming a peak flux of 2.8times 10^{-8} erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$. A ~3 s optical delay with respect to the X-ray burst is also observed and we infer that this is related to the X-ray reprocessing in the accretion disk into the optical. This provides support for the recently proposed orbital period of ~2 h. We also present an ASCA observation from March 1998, during which two X-ray bursts were detected.
Type I X-ray bursts are thermonuclear explosions on the neutron star (NS) surface by mass accretion from a companion star. Observation of X-ray bursts provides valuable information on X-ray binary systems, e.g., binary parameters, the chemical composition of accreted matter, and the nuclear equation of state (EOS) of NSs. There have been several theoretical studies to constrain the physics of X-ray bursters. However, they were mainly focused on the burning layers above the NS surface. The effects of the EOS and the heating and cooling processes inside the NS are still unknown. In this study, we calculated a series of X-ray bursts using a general relativistic stellar-evolution code with several NS EOSs. We compared the X-ray burst models with the burst parameters of a clocked burster associated with GS 1826-24. We found a monotonic correlation between the NS radius and the light-curve profile. A larger radius shows a higher recurrence time and a large peak luminosity. In contrast, the dependence of light curves on the NS mass becomes more complicated, where the neutrino cooling suppress the efficiency of nuclear ignition. We also constrained the EOS and mass of GS~1826-24, i.e., stiffer EOSs, corresponding to larger NS radii, are unpreffered due to a too high peak luminosity. The EOS and the cooling and heating of NSs are important to discuss the theoretical and observational properties of X-ray bursts.
We analyze 24 type I X-ray bursts from GS 1826-24 observed by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer between 1997 November and 2002 July. The bursts observed between 1997-98 were consistent with a stable recurrence time of 5.74 +/- 0.13 hr. The persistent intensity of GS 1826-24 increased by 36% between 1997-2000, by which time the burst interval had decreased to 4.10 +/- 0.08 hr. In 2002 July the recurrence time was shorter again, at 3.56 +/- 0.03 hr. The bursts within each epoch had remarkably identical lightcurves over the full approx. 150 s burst duration; both the initial decay timescale from the peak, and the burst fluence, increased slightly with the rise in persistent flux. The decrease in the burst recurrence time was proportional to Mdot^(-1.05+/-0.02) (where Mdot is assumed to be linearly proportional to the X-ray flux), so that the ratio alpha between the integrated persistent and burst fluxes was inversely correlated with Mdot. The average value of alpha was 41.7 +/- 1.6. Both the alpha value, and the long burst durations indicate that the hydrogen is burning during the burst via the rapid-proton (rp) process. The variation in alpha with Mdot implies that hydrogen is burning stably between bursts, requiring solar metallicity (Z ~ 0.02) in the accreted layer. We show that solar metallicity ignition models naturally reproduce the observed burst energies, but do not match the observed variations in recurrence time and burst fluence. Low metallicity models (Z ~ 0.001) reproduce the observed trends in recurrence time and fluence, but are ruled out by the variation in alpha. We discuss possible explanations, including extra heating between bursts, or that the fraction of the neutron star covered by the accreted fuel increases with Mdot.
GS 1826-238 is a well-studied X-ray bursting neutron star in a low mass binary system. Thermal Comptonisation by a hot electron cloud is a widely accepted mechanism accounting for its high energy emission, while the nature of most of its soft X-ray output is not completely understood. A further low energy component is typically needed to model the observed spectra: pure blackbody and Comptonisation-modified blackbody radiation by a lower temperature (a few keV) electron plasma were suggested to explain the low energy data. We studied the steady emission of GS 1826-238 by means of broad band (X to soft Gamma-rays) measurements obtained by the INTEGRAL observatory in 2003 and 2006. The newly developed, up-to-date Comptonisation model CompTB is applied for the first time to study effectively the low-hard state variability of a low-luminosity neutron star in a low-mass X-ray binary system. We confirm that the 3-200 keV emission of GS is characterised by Comptonisation of soft seed photons by a hot electron plasma. A single spectral component is sufficient to model the observed spectra. At lower energies, no direct blackbody emission is observed and there is no need to postulate a low temperature Compton region. Compared to the 2003 measurements, the plasma temperature decreased from 20 to 14 keV in 2006, together with the seed photons temperature. The source intensity was also found to be 30% lower in 2006, whilst the average recurrence frequency of the X-ray bursts significantly increased. Possible explanations for this apparent deviation from the typical limit-cycle behaviour of this burster are discussed.
We report on NuSTAR and Swift observations of a soft state of the neutron star low-mass X-ray binary GS 1826-24, commonly known as the clocked burster. The transition to the soft state was recorded in 2014 June through an increase of the 2-20 keV source intensity measured by MAXI, simultaneous with a decrease of the 15-50 keV intensity measured by Swift/BAT. The episode lasted approximately two months, after which the source returned to its usual hard state. We analyze the broad-band spectrum measured by Swift/XRT and NuSTAR, and estimate the accretion rate during the soft episode to be about 13% of Eddington, within the range of previous observations. However, the best fit spectral model, adopting the double Comptonization used previously, exhibits significantly softer components. We detect seven type-I X-ray bursts, all significantly weaker (and with shorter rise and decay times) than observed previously. The burst profiles and recurrence times vary significantly, ruling out the regular bursts that are typical for this source. One burst exhibited photospheric radius expansion, and we estimate the source distance at about (5.7 / xi_b^1/2) kpc, where xi_b parameterizes the possible anisotropy of the burst emission. Interpreting the soft state as a transition from an optically thin inner flow to an optically thick flow passing through a boundary layer, as is commonly observed in similar systems, is contradicted by the lower optical depth measured for the double Comptonization model we find for this soft state. The effect of a change in disk geometry on the burst behavior remains unclear.
Using simultaneous observations from Chandra and RXTE, we investigated the LMXB GS 1826-238 with the goal of studying its spectral and timing properties. The uninterrupted Chandra observation captured 6 bursts (RXTE saw 3 of the 6), yielding a recurrence time of 3.54 +/- 0.03 hr. Using the proportional counter array on board RXTE, we made a probable detection of 611 Hz burst oscillations in the decaying phases of the bursts with an average rms signal amplitude of 4.8%. The integrated persistent emission spectrum can be described as the dual Comptonization of ~ 0.3 keV soft photons by a plasma with kT_e ~ 20 keV and an optical depth of about 2.6 (interpreted as emission from the accretion disk corona), plus the Comptonization of hotter ~ 0.8 keV seed photons by a ~ 6.8 keV plasma (interpreted as emission from or near the boundary layer). We discovered evidence for a neutral Fe Kalpha emission line, and we found interstellar Fe L_II and Fe L_III absorption features. The burst spectrum can be fit by fixing the disk Comptonization parameters to the persistent emission best-fit values, and adding a blackbody. The blackbody/seed photon temperature at the peak of the burst is ~ 1.8 keV and returns to ~ 0.8 keV over 200 s. The blackbody radius is consistent with R_bb = 10.3-11.7 km assuming a distance of 6 kpc; however, by accounting for the fraction of the surface that is obscured by the disk as a function of binary inclination, we determined the source distance must actually be near 5 kpc in order for the stellar radius to lie within the commonly assumed range of 10-12 km.