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25 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/9905380

 Article overview



RXTE Observations of an Outburst of Recurrent X-ray Nova GS 1354-644
Mikhail G. Revnivtsev ; Konstantin N. Borozdin ; William C. Priedhorsky ; Alexey Vikhlinin ;
Date 28 May 1999
Subject astro-ph
Affiliation1,2), Konstantin N. Borozdin (2,1), William C. Priedhorsky, Alexey Vikhlinin (-Space Research Institute, Moscow, Russia; -LANL,Los Alamos, NM, USA; -Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA, USA
AbstractWe present the results of Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer observations of GS 1354-644 during a modest outburst in 1997-1998. The source is one of a handful of black hole X-ray transients that are confirmed to be recurrent in X-rays. A 1987 outburst of the same source observed by Ginga was much brighter, and showed a high/soft spectral state. In contrast the 1997-1998 outburst showed a low/hard spectral state. Both states are typical for black hole binaries. The RXTE All Sky Monitor observed an outburst duration of 150 to 200 days. PCA and HEXTE observations covered ~70 days near the maximum of the light curve and during the flux decline. Throughout the observations, the spectrum can be approximated by Compton upscattering of soft photons by energetic electrons. The hot electron cloud has a temperature kT ~30 keV and optical depth tau~4--5. To fit the data well an additional iron fluorescent line and reflection component are required, which indicates the presence of optically thick cool material, most probably in the outer part of the accretion disk. Dramatic fast variability was observed, and has been analyzed in the context of a shot noise model. The spectrum appeared to be softest at the peaks of the shot-noise variability. The shape of the power spectrum was typical for black hole systems in a low/hard state. We note a qualitative difference in the shape of the dependence of fractional variability on energy, when we compare systems with black holes and with neutron stars. Since it is difficult to discriminate these systems on spectral grounds, at least in their low/hard states, this new difference might be important.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/9905380
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