OBSERVATIONS OF THE HIGH-MASS X-RAY BINARY A 0535+26 IN QUIESCENCE

Date

2013-05-20

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Rothschild, Richard, Alex Markowitz, Paul Hemphill, Isabel Caballero, Katja Pottschmidt, Matthias Kühnel, Jörn Wilms, Felix Fürst, Victor Doroshenko, and Ascension Camero-Arranz. “Observations of the High-Mass X-Ray Binary A 0535+26 in Quiescence.” The Astrophysical Journal 770, no. 1 (May 2013): 19. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/770/1/19.

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Subjects

Abstract

We have analyzed three observations of the high-mass X-ray binary A 0535+26 performed by the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) three, five, and six months after the last outburst in 2011 February. We detect pulsations only in the second observation. The 3–20 keV spectra can be fit equally well with either an absorbed power law or absorbed thermal bremsstrahlung model. Reanalysis of two earlier RXTE observations made 4 yr after the 1994 outburst, original BeppoSAX observations 2 yr later, reanalysis of four EXOSAT observations made 2 yr after the last 1984 outburst, and a recent XMM-Newton observation in 2012 reveal a stacked, quiescent flux level decreasing from ∼2 to <1 × 10⁻¹¹ erg cm⁻² s⁻¹ over 6.5 yr after outburst. The detection of pulsations during half of the quiescent observations would imply that accretion onto the magnetic poles of the neutron star continues despite the fact that the circumstellar disk may no longer be present. The accretion could come from material built up at the corotation radius or from an isotropic stellar wind.