pith. sign in

arxiv: 1512.08228 · v1 · pith:P47O4AJDnew · submitted 2015-12-27 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

XMM-Newton and Suzaku Spectroscopic Studies of Unidentified X-ray Sources towards the Galactic Bulge: 1RXS J180556.1-343818 and 1RXS J173905.2-392615

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords x-raygalacticj173905j180556bulgesourcestowardsband
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

With the XMM-Newton and Suzaku observations, for the first time, we acquired broad-band spectra of two unidentified X-ray sources towards the Galactic bulge: 1RXS J180556.1$-$343818 and 1RXS J173905.2$-$392615. The 1RXS J180556.1$-$343818 spectrum in the $0.3$-$7$ keV band was explained by X-ray emission originated from an optically-thin thermal plasma with temperatures of $0.5$ and $1.7$ keV. The estimated absorption column density of $N_{\rm H} \sim 4 \times 10^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$ was significantly smaller than the Galactic HI column density towards the source. A candidate of its optical counterpart, HD 321269, was found within $4''$. In terms of the X-ray properties and the positional coincidence, it is quite conceivable that 1RXS J180556.1$-$343818 is an active G giant. We also found a dim X-ray source that was positionally consistent with 1RXS J173905.2$-$392615. Assuming that the X-ray spectrum can be reproduced with an absorbed optically-thin thermal plasma model with $kT = 1.6$ keV, the X-ray flux in the $0.5$-$8$ keV band was $8.7 \times 10^{-14}$ erg s$^{-1}$ cm$^{-2}$, fainter by a factor of $\sim 7$ than that of 1RXS J173905.2$-$392615 during the ROSAT observation. The follow-up observations we conducted revealed that these two sources would belong to the Galactic disk, rather than the Galactic bulge.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.