4.6 Article

The new intermediate long-bursting source XTE J1701-407

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 496, Issue 2, Pages 333-342

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200811091

Keywords

stars: binaries: close; stars: individual: XTE J1701-407; stars: neutron; X-rays: bursts

Funding

  1. French Space Agency (CNES)
  2. ESA-PRODEX [90057]
  3. ASI
  4. MIUR
  5. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. Le Fonds Quebecois de la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies (FQRNT)
  7. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR)

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Aims. XTE J1701-407 is a newly discovered X-ray transient source. We investigate its flux variability and study the intermediate long-and short-bursts discovered by Swift on July 17, and 27, 2008, respectively. Methods. Only one intermediate long-burst, of duration approximate to 18 min and ten days later a short burst, have been recorded from XTE J1701-407. We analyzed the public available data from Swift and RXTE, and compared the observed properties of the intermediate long-burst with theoretical ignition condition and light curves to investigate the possible nuclear-burning processes. Results. The intermediate long-burst may have exhibited a photospheric radius expansion, allowing us to derive the source distance at 6.2 kpc, assuming the empirically derived Eddington luminosity for pure helium. The intermediate long-burst decay was described most accurately by using two exponential functions with e-folding times of tau(1) = 40 +/- 3 s and tau(2) = 221 +/- 9 s. The bursts occurred at a persistent luminosity of L(per) = 8.3 x 10(36) erg s(-1) (approximate to 2.2% of the Eddington luminosity). For the intermediate long-burst, the mass accretion rate per unit area onto the neutron star was (m) over dot approximate to 4 x 10(3) g cm(-2) s(-1), and the total energy released was E(burst) approximate to 3.5 x 10(40) erg. This corresponds to an ignition column depth of y(ign) approximate to 1.8 x 10(9) g cm(-2), for a pure helium burning. We find that the energetics of this burst can be modeled in different ways, as (i) pure helium ignition, as the result of either pure helium accretion or depletion of hydrogen by steady burning during accumulation; or (ii) as ignition of a thick layer of hydrogen-rich material in a source of low metallicity. However, comparison of the burst duration with model light curves suggests that hydrogen burning plays an important role during the burst, and therefore that this source is a low accretion-rate burster with a low metallicity in the accreted material.

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