ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Chandra Observations of the Transient 7-s X-ray Pulsar AX J1845.0-0258

146   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Cindy Tam
 تاريخ النشر 2006
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف C. R. Tam




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We present the results of Chandra X-ray Observatory observations of the transient anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) candidate AX J1845.0-0258 in apparent quiescence. Within the sources error circle, we find a point source and possible counterpart, which we designate CXOU J184454.6-025653. No coherent pulsations are detected, and no extended emission is seen. The sources spectrum is equally well described by a blackbody model of temperature kT~2.0 keV or a power law model with photon index Gamma~1.0. This is considerably harder than was seen for AX J1845.0-0258 during its period of brightening in 1993 (kT~0.6 keV) despite being at least ~13 times fainter. This behavior is opposite to that observed in the case of the established transient AXP, XTE J1810-197. We therefore explore the possibility that CXOU J184454.6-025653 is an unrelated source, and that AX J1845.0-0258 remains undetected since 1993, with flux 260-430 times fainter than at that epoch. If so, this would represent an unprecedented range of variability in AXPs.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

102 - C. R. Tam 2006
The population of clearly identified anomalous X-ray pulsars has recently grown to seven, however, one candidate anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) still eludes re-confirmation. Here, we present a set of seven Chandra ACIS-S observations of the transient p ulsar AX J1845.0-0258, obtained during 2003. Our observations reveal a faint X-ray point source within the ASCA error circle of AX J1845.0-0258s discovery, which we designate CXOU J184454.6-025653 and tentatively identify as the quiescent AXP. Its spectrum is well described by an absorbed single-component blackbody (kT~2.0 keV) or power law (Gamma~1.0) that is steady in flux on timescales of at least months, but fainter than AX J1845.0-0258 was during its 1993 period of X-ray enhancement by at least a factor of 13. Compared to the outburst spectrum of AX J1845.0-0258, CXOU J184454.6-025653 is considerably harder: if truly the counterpart, then its spectral behaviour is contrary to that seen in the established transient AXP XTE J1810-197, which softened from kT~0.67 keV to ~0.18 keV in quiescence. This unexpected result prompts us to examine the possibility that we have observed an unrelated source, and we discuss the implications for AXPs, and magnetars in general.
398 - B. M. Gaensler MIT 1999
We report on Very Large Array observations in the direction of the recently-discovered slow X-ray pulsar AX J1845-0258. In the resulting images, we find a 5-arcmin shell of radio emission; the shell is linearly polarized with a non-thermal spectral i ndex. We class this source as a previously unidentified, young (< 8000 yr), supernova remnant (SNR), G29.6+0.1, which we propose is physically associated with AX J1845-0258. The young age of G29.6+0.1 is then consistent with the interpretation that anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs) are isolated, highly magnetized neutron stars (magnetars). Three of the six known AXPs can now be associated with SNRs; we conclude that AXPs are young (~<10 000 yr) objects, and that they are produced in at least 5% of core-collapse supernovae.
364 - L. Sidoli 2017
Pulsations from the high mass X-ray binary AXJ1910.7+0917 were discovered during Chandra observations performed in 2011 (Israel et al. 2016). We report here more details on this discovery and discuss the source nature. The period of the X-ray signal is P=36200+/-110s, with a pulsed fraction, PF, of 63+/-4%. Given the association with a massive B-type companion star, we ascribe this long periodicity to the rotation of the neutron star, making AXJ1910.7+0917 the slowest known X-ray pulsar. We report also on the spectroscopy of XMM-Newton observations that serendipitously covered the source field, resulting in an highly absorbed (column density almost reaching 1e23cm-2), power law X-ray spectrum. The X-ray flux is variable on a timescale of years, spanning a dynamic range >60. The very long neutron star spin period can be explained within a quasi-spherical settling accretion model, that applies to low luminosity, wind-fed, X-ray pulsars.
We report on exploratory Chandra observations of five galactic nuclei that were found to be X-ray bright during the ROSAT all-sky survey (with L_X > 10^43 erg s^-1) but subsequently exhibited a dramatic decline in X-ray luminosity. Very little is kno wn about the post-outburst X-ray properties of these enigmatic sources. In all five cases Chandra detects an X-ray source positionally coincident with the nucleus of the host galaxy. The spectrum of the brightest source (IC 3599) appears consistent with a steep power-law (Gamma~3.6). The other sources have too few counts to extract individual, well-determined spectra, but their X-ray spectra appear flatter (Gamma~2) on average. The Chandra fluxes are ~10^2-10^3 fainter than was observed during the outburst (up to 12 years previously). That all post-outburst X-ray observations showed similarly low X-ray luminosities is consistent with these sources having `switched to a persistent low-luminosity state. Unfortunately the relative dearth of long-term monitoring and other data mean that the physical mechanism responsible for this spectacular behaviour is still highly unconstrained.
We present X-ray imaging, timing, and phase resolved spectroscopy of the anomalous X-ray pulsar 1E 2259+58.6 using the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The spectrum is well described by a power law plus blackbody model with power law index = 3.6(1), kT_BB = 0.412(6) keV, and N_H=0.93(3) x 10^{22} cm^{-2}; we find no evidence for spectral features (0.5-7.0 keV). We derive a new, precise X-ray position for the source and determine its spin period, P=6.978977(24) s. Time resolved X-ray spectra show no significant variation as a function of pulse phase. We have detected excess emission beyond 4 arcsec from the central source extending to beyond 100 arcsec, due to the supernova remnant and possibly dust scattering from the interstellar medium.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا