X‐Ray Bursts from the Transient Magnetar Candidate XTE J1810−197

  • Woods P
  • Kouveliotou C
  • Gavriil F
  • et al.
79Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

We have discovered four X-ray bursts, recorded with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer Proportional Counter Array between 2003 September and 2004 April, that we show to originate from the transient magnetar candidate XTE J1810-197. The burst morphologies consist of a short spike or multiple spikes lasting ~1 s each followed by extended tails of emission where the pulsed flux from XTE J1810-197 is significantly higher. The burst spikes are likely correlated with the pulse maxima, having a chance probability of a random phase distribution of 0.4%. The burst spectra are best fit to a blackbody with temperatures 4-8 keV, considerably harder than the persistent X-ray emission. During the X-ray tails following these bursts, the temperature rapidly cools as the flux declines, maintaining a constant emitting radius after the initial burst peak. During the brightest X-ray tail, we detect a narrow emission line at 12.6 keV with an equivalent width of 1.4 keV and a probability of chance occurrence less than 4 x 10^-6. The temporal and spectral characteristics of these bursts closely resemble the bursts seen from 1E 1048.1-5937 and a subset of the bursts detected from 1E 2259+586, thus establishing XTE J1810-197 as a magnetar candidate. The bursts detected from these three objects are sufficiently similar to one another, yet significantly different from those seen from soft gamma repeaters, that they likely represent a new class of bursts from magnetar candidates exclusive (thus far) to the anomalous X-ray pulsar-like sources.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Woods, P. M., Kouveliotou, C., Gavriil, F. P., Kaspi, V. M., Roberts, M. S. E., Ibrahim, A., … Finger, M. H. (2005). X‐Ray Bursts from the Transient Magnetar Candidate XTE J1810−197. The Astrophysical Journal, 629(2), 985–997. https://doi.org/10.1086/431476

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free