ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Many X-ray accreting pulsars have a soft excess below 10 keV. This feature has been detected also in faint sources and at low luminosity levels, suggesting that it is an ubiquitous phenomenon. In the case of the high luminosity pulsars (Lx > 10^36 erg/s), the fit of this component with thermal emission models usually provides low temperatures (kT < 0.5 keV) and large emission regions (R > a few hundred km); for this reason, it is referred to as a `soft excess. On the other hand, we recently found that in persistent, low-luminosity (Lx ~ 10^34 erg/s) and long-period (P > 100 s) Be accreting pulsars the observed excess can be modeled with a rather hot (kT > 1 keV) blackbody component of small area (R < 0.5 km), which can be interpreted as emission from the NS polar caps. In this paper we present the results of a recent XMM-Newton observation of the Galactic Be pulsar RX J0440.9+4431, which is a poorly studied member of this class of sources. We have found a best-fit period P = 204.96(+/-0.02) s, which implies an average pulsar spin-down during the last 13 years, with dP/dt ~ 6x10^(-9) s/s. The estimated source luminosity is Lx ~ 8x10^(34) erg/s: this value is higher by a factor < 10 compared to those obtained in the first source observations, but almost two orders of magnitude lower than those measured during a few outbursts detected in the latest years. The source spectrum can be described with a power law plus blackbody model, with kTbb = 1.34(+/-0.04) keV and Rbb = 273(+/-16) m, suggesting a polar-cap origin of this component. Our results support the classification of RX J0440.9+4431 as a persistent Be/NS pulsar, and confirm that the hot blackbody spectral component is a common property of this class of sources.
We present the spectroscopic and photometric observations on the Be/X-ray binary RX~J0440.9+4431 from 2001 to 2014. The short-term and long-term variability of the H$alpha$ line profile indicates that one-armed global oscillations existed in the circ
One of the goals of the XMM-Newton survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud is the study of the Be/X-ray binary population. During one of our first survey observations a bright new transient - XMMUJ004814.0-732204 - was discovered. We present the analysi
We report pulsations in the X-ray flux of RX J0101.3-7211 in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) with a period of 455+/-2 s in XMM-Newton EPIC-PN data. The X-ray spectrum can be described by a power-law with a photon index of 0.6+/-0.1. Timing analysis
We report a 72 ks XMM-Newton observation of the Be/X-ray pulsar (BeXRP) RX J0812.4-3114 in quiescence ($L_X approx 1.6 times 10^{33}~mathrm{erg~s^{-1}}$). Intriguingly, we find a two component spectrum, with a hard power-law ($Gamma approx 1.5$) and
Results on timing and spectral properties of the Be/X-ray binary pulsar 3A 0726-260 (4U 0728-25) are presented. The binary was observed on 2016 May 6-7 with the Large Area X-ray Proportional Counter (LAXPC) and Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) instruments