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Observations of the ultraviolet continuum of the X-ray binary system Her X-1/HZ Herculis with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope show quasiperiodic oscillations (QPOs) at frequencies of 8+/-2 and 43+/-2 mHz, with rms amplitudes of 2 and 4% of the steady flux. Observations with the Keck telescope confirm the presence of the higher frequency QPO in the optical continuum, with a rms amplitude of 1.6+/-0.2%. The QPOs are most prominent in the HST data near phi=0.5 (where phi=0 is the middle of the X-ray eclipse), suggesting that they arise not in the accretion disk but on the X-ray heated face of the companion star. We discuss scenarios in which the companion star reprocesses oscillations in the disk which are caused by either Keplerian rotation or a beat frequency between the neutron star spin and Keplerian rotation at some radius in the accretion disk.
The UV emission lines of Hercules X-1, resolved with the HST GHRS and STIS, can be divided into broad (FWHM 750 km/s) and narrow (FWHM 150 km/s) components. The broad lines can be unambiguously identified with emission from an accretion disk which ro
We find line emission from the hydrogen- and/or helium-like ions of Ne, O, N and C in the low and short-on states of Her X-1, using the XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer. The emission line velocity broadening is 200 < sigma < 500 km/s. Plasm
The cyclotron line in the spectrum of the accretion-powered pulsar Her X-1 offers an opportunity to assess the ability of the BATSE Spectroscopy Detectors (SDs) to detect lines like those seen in some GRBs. Preliminary analysis of an initial SD pulsa
We report on the discovery of mHz quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) from the high mass X-ray binary (HMXB) IGRJ19140+0951, during a 40 ks XMM-Newton observation performed in 201 5, which caught the source in its faintest state ever observed. At the
Hercules X-1 is one of the best studied highly magnetised neutron star X-ray binaries with a wealth of archival data. We present the discovery of an ionised wind in its X-ray spectrum when the source is in the high state. The wind detection is statis