During a 50 ks monitoring observation of the Galactic bulge performed in September 1999 by the Wide Field Cameras on board the BeppoSAX satellite, an X-ray burst was detected from a sky position ~3 degrees off the Galactic centre. No previously known X-ray sources are located within the position error circle of the observed burst. The new burster, SAX J1752.3-3138, did not show any persistent emission during the whole observation. No other bursting events, as well as steady emission, were reported so far by other instruments or detected in the WFC archive, which covers ~6 Ms and ~4 Ms for burst and persistent luminosity detection, respectively, starting from August 1996. Unless the source is a very weak transient, this could indicate SAX J1752.3-3138 is an atypical burster, a member of a possibly new class of sources characterised by very low steady luminosities and accretion rates (L_X < 10^{35} erg/s) and extremely rare bursting activity. The characteristics of the detected burst are consistent with a type I event, identifying the source as a weakly magnetised neutron star in a low-mass X-ray binary system. Evidence for photospheric radius expansion due to Eddington-limited burst luminosity allows to estimate the distance to the source (~9 kpc).

Discovery of the X-ray burster SAX J1752.3-3138

2001

Abstract

During a 50 ks monitoring observation of the Galactic bulge performed in September 1999 by the Wide Field Cameras on board the BeppoSAX satellite, an X-ray burst was detected from a sky position ~3 degrees off the Galactic centre. No previously known X-ray sources are located within the position error circle of the observed burst. The new burster, SAX J1752.3-3138, did not show any persistent emission during the whole observation. No other bursting events, as well as steady emission, were reported so far by other instruments or detected in the WFC archive, which covers ~6 Ms and ~4 Ms for burst and persistent luminosity detection, respectively, starting from August 1996. Unless the source is a very weak transient, this could indicate SAX J1752.3-3138 is an atypical burster, a member of a possibly new class of sources characterised by very low steady luminosities and accretion rates (L_X < 10^{35} erg/s) and extremely rare bursting activity. The characteristics of the detected burst are consistent with a type I event, identifying the source as a weakly magnetised neutron star in a low-mass X-ray binary system. Evidence for photospheric radius expansion due to Eddington-limited burst luminosity allows to estimate the distance to the source (~9 kpc).
2001
IASF - Istituto di astrofisica spaziale e fisica cosmica
binaries: close
stars: neutron, indi
X-rays: bursts
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/164243
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