The Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient with the shortest orbital period: Suzaku observes one orbit in IGR J16479-4514
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Date
2013-07-18
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Citation of Original Publication
Sidoli, Lara, Paolo Esposito, Vito Sguera, Arash Bodaghee, John Tomsick, Katja Pottschmidt, Jerome Rodriguez, Patrizia Romano, and Joern Wilms. “The Supergiant Fast X-Ray Transient with the Shortest Orbital Period: Suzaku Observes One Orbit in IGR J16479-4514.” In Proceedings of An INTEGRAL View of the High-Energy Sky (the First 10 Years) - 9th INTEGRAL Workshop and Celebration of the 10th Anniversary of the Launch — PoS(INTEGRAL 2012), 176:034. SISSA Medialab, 2013. https://doi.org/10.22323/1.176.0034.
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Abstract
The eclipsing hard X–ray source IGR J16479–4514 is the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient (SFXT)
with the shortest orbital period (Pₒᵣb∼3.32 days). This allowed us to perform a 250 ks long X–ray
observation with Suzaku in 2012 February, covering most of its orbit, including the eclipse egress.
Outside the eclipse, the source luminosity is around a few 10³⁴ erg s⁻¹
. The X–ray spectrum can
be fit with an absorbed power law together with a neutral iron emission line at 6.4 keV. The
column density, NH, is constant at ∼10²³ cm⁻² outside the X–ray eclipse. During the eclipse
it is lower, consistent with a scattering origin for the low X–ray emission during the eclipse
by the supergiant companion. The scattered X–ray emission during the X–ray eclipse is used
to directly probe the density, ρw, of the companion wind at the orbital separation, resulting in
ρ w=7×10⁻¹⁴ g cm⁻³
, which translates into a ratio M˙w/v∞ = 7×10⁻¹⁷ M⊙/km of the wind mass
loss rate to the wind terminal velocity. This ratio, assuming reasonable terminal velocities in the
range 500–3000 km s⁻¹
, translates into an accretion luminosity two orders of magnitude higher
than that observed. We conclude that a mechanism reducing the accretion rate onto the compact
object is at work, likely due to the neutron star magnetosphere.