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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.
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, energeti
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 compos
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 sou
We measured the thermonuclear burning efficiency as a function of accretion rate for the Type I X-ray bursts of five low-mass X-ray binary systems. We chose sources with measured neutron star spins and a substantial population of bursts from a large
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 o