SIMBAD references

2011ApJ...728...86T - Astrophys. J., 728, 86 (2011/February-3)

Confirmation of IGR J01363+6610 as a Be X-ray binary with very low quiescent X-ray luminosity.

TOMSICK J.A., HEINKE C., HALPERN J., KAARET P., CHATY S., RODRIGUEZ J. and BODAGHEE A.

Abstract (from CDS):

The field containing the candidate High Mass X-ray Binary IGR J01363+6610 was observed by XMM-Newton on 2009 July 31 for 28 ks. A Be star was previously suggested as the possible counterpart of the INTEGRAL source, and although Chandra, during a 2007 observation, did not detect an X-ray source at the position of the Be star, we find a variable source (XMMU J013549.5+661243) with an average X-ray flux of 2x10–13 erg/cm2/s (0.2-12 keV, unabsorbed) at this position with XMM-Newton. The spectrum of this source is consistent with a hard power law with a photon index of Γ = 1.4±0.3 and a column density of NH= (1.5+0.7–0.5)x1022/cm2 (90% confidence errors). These results, along with our optical investigation of other X-ray sources in the field, make the association with the Be star very likely, and the 2 kpc distance estimate for the Be star indicates an X-ray luminosity of 9.1x1031 erg/s. This is lower than typical for a Be X-ray binary, and the upper limit on the luminosity was even lower (<1.4x1031 erg/s assuming the same spectral model) during the Chandra observation. We discuss possible implications of the very low quiescent luminosity for the physical properties of IGR J01363+6610.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): black hole physics - stars: emission-line, Be - stars: individual: IGR J01363+6610 - stars: neutron - X-rays: stars

Simbad objects: 18

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2011ApJ...728...86T and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu