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arxiv: 1302.1702 · v1 · pith:D5GEZGYBnew · submitted 2013-02-07 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE · astro-ph.GA

The Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient with the shortest orbital period: Suzaku observes one orbit in IGRJ16479-4514

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE astro-ph.GA
keywords x-rayeclipsewindduringemissionorbitalsupergiantterminal
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The eclipsing hard X-ray source IGR J16479-4514 is the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient (SFXT) with the shortest orbital period (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 1E34erg/s. 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 is constant at 1E23 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 wind. The scattered X-ray emission during the X-ray eclipse is used to directly probe the density of the companion wind at the orbital separation, resulting in 7E-14 g/cm3, which translates into a ratio Mdot_w/v_terminal = 7E-17 solar masses/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, 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.

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