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Understanding the persistent emission is crucial for studying type I X-ray bursts, which provide insight into neutron star properties. Although accretion disc coronae appear to be common in many accreting systems, their fundamental properties remain insufficiently understood. Recent work suggests that Type I X-ray bursts from accreting neutron stars provide an opportunity to probe the characteristics of coronae. Several studies have observed hard X-ray shortages from the accretion disk during an X-ray burst implying strong coronal cooling by burst photons. Here, we use the plasma emission code EQPAIR to study the impact of X-ray bursts on coronae, and how the coronal and burst properties affect the coronal electron temperatures and emitted spectra. Assuming a constant accretion rate during the burst, our simulations show that soft photons can cool coronal electrons by a factor of $gtrsim 10$ and cause a reduction of emission in the $30$-$50$ keV band to $lesssim 1%$ of the pre-burst emission. This hard X-ray drop is intensified when the coronal optical depth and aspect ratio is increased. In contrast, depending on the properties of the burst and corona, the emission in the $8$-$24$ keV band can either increase, by a factor of $gtrsim20$, or decrease, down to $lesssim 1%$ of the pre-burst emission. An increasing accretion rate during the X-ray burst reduces the coronal cooling effects and the electron temperature drop can be mitigated by $gtrsim60%$. These results indicate that changes of the hard X-ray flux during an X-ray burst probe the geometrical properties of the corona.
We perform a set of numerical experiments studying the interaction of Type I X-ray bursts with thin, Shakura-Sunyaev type accretion discs. Careful observations of X-ray spectra during such bursts have hinted at changes occurring in the inner regions
Accreting neutron stars (NS) can exhibit high frequency modulations in their lightcurves during thermonuclear X-ray bursts, known as burst oscillations. The frequencies can be offset from the spin frequency of the NS by several Hz, and can drift by 1
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
The neutron-star X-ray transient XTE J1701-462 was observed for $sim$3 Ms with xte during its 2006-2007 outburst. Here we report on the discovery of three type-I X-ray bursts from XTE J1701-462. They occurred as the source was in transition from the
Type I X-ray bursts are thermonuclear explosions that occur in the envelopes of accreting neutron stars. Detailed observations of these phenomena have prompted numerous studies in theoretical astrophysics and experimental nuclear physics since their