Time‐resolved X‐Ray Spectral Modeling of an Intermediate Burst from SGR 1900+14 Observed by HETE‐2 FREGATE and WXM

  • Olive J
  • Hurley K
  • Sakamoto T
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present a detailed analysis of a 3.5 s long burst from SGR 1900+14 that occurred on 2001 July 2. The 2-150 keV time-integrated energy spectrum is well described by the sum of two blackbodies whose temperatures are approximately 4. 3 and 9.8 keV. The time-resolved energy spectra are similarly well fitted by the sum of two blackbodies. The higher temperature blackbody evolves with time in a manner consistent with a shrinking emitting surface. The interpretation of these results in the context of the magnetar model suggests that the two-blackbody fit is an approximation of an absorbed, multitemperature spectrum expected on theoretical grounds rather than a physical description of the emission. If this is indeed the case, our data provide further evidence for a strong magnetic field and indicate that the entire neutron star was radiating during most of the burst duration.

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Olive, J. ‐F., Hurley, K., Sakamoto, T., Atteia, J. ‐L., Crew, G., Ricker, G., … Kawai, N. (2004). Time‐resolved X‐Ray Spectral Modeling of an Intermediate Burst from SGR 1900+14 Observed by HETE‐2 FREGATE and WXM. The Astrophysical Journal, 616(2), 1148–1158. https://doi.org/10.1086/424957

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