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The INTEGRAL satellite has revealed a previously hidden population of absorbed high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) hosting supergiant (SG) stars. Among them, IGR J16320-4751 is a classical system intrinsically obscured by its environment, with a column density of ~10$^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$, composed by a neutron star (NS, spin period ~1300 s), accreting matter from the stellar wind of an O8I star, with an orbital period of ~9 d. We analyzed all archival XMM-Newton and Swift/BAT observations, performing a detailed temporal and spectral analysis of its X-ray emission. XMM-Newton light curves show high-variability and flaring activity on several timescales. In one observation we detected two short and bright flares where the flux increased by a factor of ~10 for ~300 s, with similar behavior in the soft and hard X-ray bands. By inspecting the 4500-day light curves of the Swift/BAT data, we derived a refined period of 8.99$pm$0.01 days. The XMM-Newton spectra are characterized by a highly absorbed continuum and a Fe absorption edge at ~7 keV. We fitted the continuum with a thermally Comptonized model, and the emission lines with 3 narrow Gaussian functions using two absorption components, to take into account both the interstellar medium and the intrinsic absorption. We derived the column density at different orbital phases, showing its clear modulation. We also show that the flux of the Fe K$alpha$ line is correlated with the NH column, suggesting a link between absorbing and fluorescent matter that, together with the orbital modulation, points towards the SG wind as the main contributor to both continuum absorption and Fe K$alpha$ emission. Assuming a simple model for the SG wind we were able to explain the orbital modulation of the absorption column density, Fe K$alpha$ emission, and the high-energy Swift/BAT flux, allowing us to constrain the geometrical parameters of the binary system.
We report a discovery of strong modulations of the X-ray flux detected from IGR J16320-4751 = AX J1631.9-4752 with a period of P~1300 sec. We reanalyzed the data of an XMM-Newton ToO performed soon after the discovery of the source by INTEGRAL and fo
We present the results of combined INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton observations of the supergiant fast X-ray transient (SFXT) IGR J17354$-$3255. Three XMM-Newton observations of lengths 33.4 ks, 32.5 ks and 21.9 ks were undertaken, the first an initial point
We report on a 12 hr XMM-Newton observation of the supergiant High-Mass X-ray Binary IGR J16207-5129. This is only the second soft X-ray (0.4-15 keV, in this case) study of the source since it was discovered by the INTEGRAL satellite. The average ene
We report on the results of a NuSTAR observation of the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient pulsar IGRJ11215-5952 during the peak of its outburst in June 2017. IGRJ11215-5952 is the only SFXT undergoing strictly periodic outbursts, every 165 days. NuSTAR
We present the results of a 500 ksec long XMM-Newton observation and a 120 ksec long quasi-simultaneous Chandra observation of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy 1H0707-495 performed in 2010 September. Consistent with earlier results by Fabian et al. (