23 results on '"A. Camero-Arranz"'
Search Results
2. COLONIZACIÓN ESPACIAL EN EL AULA DE PRIMARIA.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, Ascensión
- Subjects
MARTIAN surface ,SCIENCE education ,SOUND art ,PRIMARY education ,THREE-dimensional printing - Abstract
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- Published
- 2023
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3. Activity from the Be/X-ray binary system V0332+53 during its intermediate-luminosity outburst in 2008.
- Author
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Caballero-García, M. D., Camero-Arranz, A., Arabacı, M. Özbey, Zurita, C., Suso, J., Gutiérrez-Soto, J., Beklen, E., Kiaeerad, F., Garrido, R., and Hudec, R.
- Abstract
We present a study of the Be/X-ray binary system V 0332+53 with the main goal of characterizing its behaviour mainly during the intermediate-luminosity X-ray event in 2008. In addition, we aim to contribute to the understanding of the behaviour of the donor companion by including optical data from our dedicated campaign starting in 2006. Methods. V 0332+53 was observed by RXTE and Swift during the decay of the intermediate-luminosity X-ray outburst of 2008, and with Suzaku before the rising of the third normal outburst of the 2010 series. In addition, we present recent data from the Spanish ground-based astronomical observatories of El Teide (Tenerife), Roque de los Muchachos (La Palma), and Sierra Nevada (Granada), and since 2006 from the Turkish TÜB˙ITAK National Observatory (Antalya). We have performed temporal analyses to investigate the transient behaviour of this system during several outbursts. Results. Our optical study revealed that continuous mass ejection episodes from the Be star have been taking place since 2006 and another is currently ongoing. The broad-band 1–60 keV X-ray spectrum of the neutron star during the decay of the 2008 outburst was well fitted with standard phenomenological models that were enhanced by an absorption feature of unknown origin at about 10 keV and a narrow iron K-alpha fluorescence line at 6.4 keV. For the first time in V 0332+53 we tentatively see an increase in the cyclotron line energy with increasing flux (although further and more sensitive observations are needed to confirm this). The fast aperiodic variability shows a quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) at 227 ± 9 mHz only during the lowest luminosities, which might indicate that the inner regions surrounding the magnetosphere are more visible during the lowest flux states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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4. Earth occultation imaging of the low energy gamma-ray sky with GBM.
- Author
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Rodi, J., Cherry, M. L., Case, G. L., Camero-Arranz, A., Chaplin, V., Finger, M. H., Jenke, P., and Wilson-Hodge, C. A.
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OCCULTATIONS (Astronomy) ,EARTH (Planet) ,GAMMA ray bursts ,IMAGING systems ,NATURAL satellites ,FERMI Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Spacecraft) - Abstract
Aims. The Earth Occultation Technique (EOT) has been applied to Fermi's Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) to perform all-sky monitoring for a predetermined catalog of hard X-ray/soft y -ray sources. In order to search for sources not in the catalog, thus completing the catalog and reducing a source of systematic error in EOT, an imaging method has been developed - Imaging with a Differential filter using the Earth Occultation Method (IDEOM). Methods. IDEOM is a tomographic imaging method that takes advantage of the orbital precession of the Fermi satellite. Using IDEOM, all-sky reconstructions have been generated for ~4 years of GBM data in the 12-50 keV, 50-100 keV and 100-300 keV energy bands in search of sources otherwise unmodeled by the GBM occultation analysis. Results. IDEOM analysis resulted in the detection of 57 sources in the 12-50 keV energy band, 23 sources in the 50-100 keV energy band, and 7 sources in the 100-300 keV energy band. Seventeen sources were not present in the original GBM-EOT catalog and have now been added. We also present the first joined averaged spectra for four persistent sources detected by GBM using EOT and by the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on Fermi: NGC 1275, 3C 273, Cen A, and the Crab. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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5. OBSERVATIONS OF THE HIGH-MASS X-RAY BINARY A 0535+26 IN QUIESCENCE.
- Author
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ROTHSCHILD, RICHARD, MARKOWITZ, ALEX, HEMPHILL, PAUL, CABALLERO, ISABEL, POTTSCHMIDT, KATJA, KÜHNEL, MATTHIAS, WILMS, JÖRN, FÜRST, FELIX, DOROSHENKO, VICTOR, and CAMERO-ARRANZ, ASCENSION
- Subjects
STAR observations ,BINARY stars ,QUIESCENT plasmas ,BREMSSTRAHLUNG ,STELLAR oscillations - 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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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6. The extended X-ray emission around RRAT J1819−1458.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Rea, N., Bucciantini, N., McLaughlin, M. A., Slane, P., Gaensler, B. M., Torres, D. F., Stella, L., de Oña, E., Israel, G. L., Camilo, F., and Possenti, A.
- Subjects
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X-ray spectroscopy , *MAGNETIC fields , *ROTATIONAL motion , *RADIO astronomy , *ASTRONOMICAL observations , *IMAGING systems , *STELLAR luminosity function - Abstract
We present new imaging and spectral analysis of the recently discovered extended X-ray emission around the high magnetic field rotating radio transient RRAT J1819−1458. We used two Chandra observations performed for this object in 2008 May 31 and 2011 May 28, respectively. The diffuse X-ray emission was detected with a significance of ∼19σ in the image obtained by combining the two observations. Neither long-term spectral nor timing variability has been observed from the source or the nebula. RRAT J1819−1458 shows an unusual high X-ray efficiency of $\eta _{{\rm X}} \equiv L_{{\rm X}(0.3{\rm -}5\,\mathrm{keV})}/\skew4\dot{E}_{\rm rot} \sim 0.15$ at converting spin-down power into X-ray luminosity. The most favourable scenario for the origin of this extended X-ray emission is either a pulsar wind nebula or a scattering halo. A magnetically powered scenario for the extended emission is viable only in the case of a Compton nebula, while it can be tentatively disfavoured in the case of synchrotron emission. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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7. A DOUBLE-PEAKED OUTBURST OF A 0535+26 OBSERVED WITH INTEGRAL, RXTE, AND SUZAKU.
- Author
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CABALLERO, I., POTTSCHMIDT, K., MARCU, D. M., BARRAGAN, L., FERRIGNO, C., KLOCHKOV, D., HERAS, J. A. ZURITA, SUCHY, S., WILMS, J., KRETSCHMAR, P., SANTANGELO, A., KREYKENBOHM, I., FÜRST, F., ROTHSCHILD, R., STAUBERT, R., FINGER, M. H., CAMERO-ARRANZ, A., MAKISHIMA, K., ENOTO, T., and IWAKIRI, W.
- Published
- 2013
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8. 4U 1626-67 as seen by Suzaku before and after the 2008 torque reversal.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Pottschmidt, K., Finger, M. H., Ikhsanov, N. R., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., and Marcu, D. M.
- Abstract
Aims. The accretion-powered pulsar 4U 1626–67 experienced a new torque reversal at the beginning of 2008, after about 18 years of steadily spinning down. The main goal of the present work is to study this recent torque reversal that occurred in February 2008. Methods. We present a spectral analysis of this source using two pointed observations performed by Suzaku in March 2006 and in September 2010. Results. We confirm with Suzaku the presence of a strong emission-line complex centered on 1 keV, with the strongest line being the hydrogen-like Ne Lyα at 1.025(3) keV. We were able to resolve this complex with up to seven emission lines. A dramatic increase in the intensity of the Ne Lyα line after the 2008 torque reversal occurred, with the equivalent width of this line reaching almost the same value measured by ASCA in 1993. We also report on the detection of a cyclotron line feature centered at ∼37 keV. In spite of the increase in the X-ray luminosity (0.5−100 keV) of a factor of ∼2.8 that occurred between these two observations, no significant change in the energy of the cyclotron line feature was observed. However, the intensity of the ∼1 keV line complex increased by an overall factor of ∼8. Conclusions. Our results favor a scenario in which the neutron star in 4U 1626–67 accretes material from a geometrically thin disk during both the spin-up and spin-down phases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
9. The extended X–ray emission around RRAT J1819–1458.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Rea, N., McLaughlin, M.A., Bucciantini, N., Slane, P., Gaensler, B., Torres, D., Stella, L., de Oña, E., Israel, G., Camilo, F., and Possenti, A.
- Abstract
We present new imaging and spectral analysis of the recently discovered extended X–ray emission around the high-magnetic-field rotating radio transient RRAT J1819–1458. We used two Chandra observations, taken on 2008 May 31 and 2011 May 28. The diffuse X–ray emission was detected with a significance of ~19σ in the image obtained by combining the two observations. Long-term spectral variability has not been observed. Possible scenarios for the origin of this diffuse X–ray emission, further detailed in Camero–Arranz et al. (2012), are here discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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10. FIRST RESULTS FROM FERMI GAMMA-RAY BURST MONITOR EARTH OCCULTATION MONITORING: OBSERVATIONS OF SOFT GAMMA-RAY SOURCES ABOVE 100 keV.
- Author
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Case, G. L., Cherry, M. L., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., Camero-Arranz, A., Rodi, J. C., Chaplin, V., Finger, M. H., Jenke, P., Beklen, E., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Connaughton, V., Greiner, J., Kippen, R. M., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R., and Kienlin, A. von
- Published
- 2011
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11. WHEN A STANDARD CANDLE FLICKERS.
- Author
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WILSON-HODGE, COLLEEN A., CHERRY, MICHAEL L., CASE, GARY L., BAUMGARTNER, WAYNE H., BEKLEN, ELIF, BHAT, P. NARAYANA, BRIGGS, MICHAEL S., CAMERO-ARRANZ, ASCENSION, CHAPLIN, VANDIVER, CONNAUGHTON, VALERIE, FINGER, MARK H., GEHRELS, NEIL, GREINER, JOCHEN, JAHODA, KEITH, JENKE, PETER, KIPPEN, R. MARC, KOUVELIOTOU, CHRYSSA, KRIMM, HANS A., KUULKERS, ERIK, and LUND, NIELS
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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12. DETECTION OF A THERMAL SPECTRAL COMPONENT IN THE PROMPT EMISSION OF GRB 100724B.
- Author
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GUIRIEC, SYLVAIN, CONNAUGHTON, VALERIE, BRIGGS, MICHAEL S., BURGESS, MICHAEL, RYDE, FELIX, DAIGNE, FRÉDÉRIC, MÉSZÁROS, PETER, GOLDSTEIN, ADAM, MCENERY, JULIE, OMODEI, NICOLA, BHAT, P.N., BISSALDI, ELISABETTA, CAMERO-ARRANZ, ASCENSIÓN, CHAPLIN, VANDIVER, DIEHL, ROLAND, FISHMAN, GERALD, FOLEY, SUZANNE, GIBBY, MELISSA, GILES, MISTY M., and GREINER, JOCHEN
- Published
- 2011
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13. Outbursts Large and Small from EXO 2030+375.
- Author
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Wilson, Colleen A., Finger, Mark H., and Camero-Arranz, Ascensión
- Published
- 2008
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14. A new low-B magnetar: Swift J1822.3–1606.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Rea, N., Israel, G. L., Esposito, P., Pons, J. A., Mignani, R. P., Turolla, R., Zane, S., Burgay, M., Possenti, A., Campana, S., Enoto, T., Gehrels, N., Göğüş, E., Götz, D., Kouveliotou, C., Makishima, K., Mereghetti, S., and Oates, S. R.
- Abstract
We report on the long term X-ray monitoring with Swift, RXTE, Suzaku, Chandra, and XMM-Newton of the outburst of the newly discovered magnetar Swift J1822.3–1606 (SGR 1822-1606), from the first observations soon after the detection of the short X-ray bursts which led to its discovery (July 2011), through the first stages of its outburst decay (April 2012). Our X-ray timing analysis finds the source rotating with a period of P = 8.43772016(2) s and a period derivative Ṗ = 8.3(2) × 10−14 ss−1, which entails an inferred dipolar surface magnetic field of B ≃ 2.7 × 1013 G at the equator. This measurement makes Swift J1822.3–1606 the second lowest magnetic field magnetar (after SGR 0418+5729; Rea et al. 2010). Following the flux and spectral evolution from the beginning of the outburst, we find that the flux decreased by about an order of magnitude, with a subtle softening of the spectrum, both typical of the outburst decay of magnetars. By modeling the secular thermal evolution of Swift J1822.3–1606, we find that the observed timing properties of the source, as well as its quiescent X-ray luminosity, can be reproduced if it was born with a poloidal and crustal toroidal fields of Bp ~ 1.5 × 1014 G and Btor ~ 7 × 1014 G, respectively, and if its current age is ~550 kyr (Rea et al. 2012). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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15. THE FERMI–GBM THREE-YEAR X-RAY BURST CATALOG.
- Author
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P. A. Jenke, M. Linares, V. Connaughton, E. Beklen, A. Camero-Arranz, M. H. Finger, and C. A. Wilson-Hodge
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GAMMA ray measurement ,GAMMA ray bursts ,FERMI Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Spacecraft) ,NEUTRON stars ,X-ray spectra ,BLACKBODY radiation ,EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
The Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) is an all-sky gamma-ray monitor well known in the gamma-ray burst (GRB) community. Although GBM excels in detecting the hard, bright extragalactic GRBs, its sensitivity above 8 keV and its all-sky view make it an excellent instrument for the detection of rare, short-lived Galactic transients. In 2010 March, we initiated a systematic search for transients using GBM data. We conclude this phase of the search by presenting a three-year catalog of 1084 X-ray bursts. Using spectral analysis, location, and spatial distributions we classified the 1084 events into 752 thermonuclear X-ray bursts, 267 transient events from accretion flares and X-ray pulses, and 65 untriggered gamma-ray bursts. All thermonuclear bursts have peak blackbody temperatures broadly consistent with photospheric radius expansion (PRE) bursts. We find an average rate of 1.4 PRE bursts per day, integrated over all Galactic bursters within about 10 kpc. These include 33 and 10 bursts from the ultra-compact X-ray binaries 4U 0614+09 and 2S 0918-549, respectively. We discuss these recurrence times and estimate the total mass ejected by PRE bursts in our Galaxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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16. A STRONGLY MAGNETIZED PULSAR WITHIN THE GRASP OF THE MILKY WAY'S SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE.
- Author
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Rea, N., Esposito, P., Pons, J. A., Turolla, R., Torres, D. F., Israel, G. L., Possenti, A., Burgay, M., Viganò, D., Papitto, A., Perna, R., Stella, L., Ponti, G., Baganoff, F. K., Haggard, D., Camero-Arranz, A., Zane, S., Minter, A., Mereghetti, S., and Tiengo, A.
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- 2013
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17. THE FERMI-GBM X-RAY BURST MONITOR: THERMONUCLEAR BURSTS FROM 4U 0614+09.
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Linares, M., Connaughton, V., Jenke, P., van der Horst, A. J., Camero-Arranz, A., Kouveliotou, C., Chakrabarty, D., Beklen, E., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Finger, M., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R., von Kienlin, A., and Wilson-Hodge, C. A.
- Subjects
NEUTRON stars ,THERMONUCLEAR reactions in stars ,THERMONUCLEAR fusion ,X-ray bursts ,GAMMA ray bursts ,GAMMA ray telescopes ,EDDINGTON mass limit - Abstract
Thermonuclear bursts from slowly accreting neutron stars (NSs) have proven difficult to detect, yet they are potential probes of the thermal properties of the NS interior. During the first year of a systematic all-sky search for X-ray bursts using the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope we have detected 15 thermonuclear bursts from the NS low-mass X-ray binary 4U 0614+09 when it was accreting at nearly 1% of the Eddington limit. We measured an average burst recurrence time of 12 ± 3 days (68% confidence interval) between 2010 March and 2011 March, classified all bursts as normal duration bursts and placed a lower limit on the recurrence time of long/intermediate bursts of 62 days (95% confidence level). We discuss how observations of thermonuclear bursts in the hard X-ray band compare to pointed soft X-ray observations and quantify such bandpass effects on measurements of burst radiated energy and duration. We put our results for 4U 0614+09 in the context of other bursters and briefly discuss the constraints on ignition models. Interestingly, we find that the burst energies in 4U 0614+09 are on average between those of normal duration bursts and those measured in long/intermediate bursts. Such a continuous distribution in burst energy provides a new observational link between normal and long/intermediate bursts. We suggest that the apparent bimodal distribution that defined normal and long/intermediate duration bursts during the last decade could be due to an observational bias toward detecting only the longest and most energetic bursts from slowly accreting NSs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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18. ORBITAL DECAY AND EVIDENCE OF DISK FORMATION IN THE X-RAY BINARY PULSAR OAO 1657–415.
- Author
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Jenke, P. A., Finger, M. H., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., and Camero-Arranz, A.
- Subjects
PULSARS ,X-ray binaries ,BINARY stars ,GAMMA ray bursts ,NEUTRON stars - Abstract
OAO 1657–415 is an eclipsing X-ray binary wind-fed pulsar that has exhibited smooth spin-up/spin-down episodes and has undergone several torque reversals throughout its long history of observation. We present a frequency history spanning nearly 19 years of observations from the Burst and Transient Source Experiment and from the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (Fermi/GBM). Our analysis suggests two modes of accretion: one resulting in steady spin-up correlated with flux during which we believe a stable accretion disk is present and one in which the neutron star is spinning down at a lesser rate which is uncorrelated with flux. Orbital elements of the pulsar system are determined at several intervals throughout this history. With these ephemerides, statistically significant orbital decay with a is established. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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19. X-RAY AND OPTICAL OBSERVATIONS OF A 0535+26.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Finger, M. H., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., Jenke, P., Steele, I., Coe, M. J., Gutierrez-Soto, J., Kretschmar, P., Caballero, I., Yan, J., Rodríguez, J., Suso, J., Case, G., Cherry, M. L., Guiriec, S., and McBride, V. A.
- Subjects
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BE stars , *BINARY systems (Astronomy) , *DISKS (Astrophysics) , *ACCRETION (Astrophysics) , *X-ray astronomy - Abstract
We present recent contemporaneous X-ray and optical observations of the Be/X-ray binary system A 0535+26 with the Fermi/Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) and several ground-based observatories. These new observations are put into the context of the rich historical data (since ∼1978) and discussed in terms of the neutron-star-Be-disk interaction. The Be circumstellar disk was exceptionally large just before the 2009 December giant outburst, which may explain the origin of the unusual recent X-ray activity of this source. We found a peculiar evolution of the pulse profile during this giant outburst, with the two main components evolving in opposite ways with energy. A hard 30-70 mHz X-ray quasi-periodic oscillation was detected with GBM during this 2009 December giant outburst. It becomes stronger with increasing energy and disappears at energies below 25 keV. In the long term a strong optical/X-ray correlation was found for this system, however in the medium term the Hα equivalent width and the V-band brightness showed an anti-correlation after ∼2002 August. Each giant X-ray outburst occurred during a decline phase of the optical brightness, while the Hα showed a strong emission. In late 2010 and before the 2011 February outburst, rapid V/R variations are observed in the strength of the two peaks of the Hα line. These had a period of ∼25 days and we suggest the presence of a global one-armed oscillation to explain this scenario. A general pattern might be inferred, where the disk becomes weaker and shows V/R variability beginning ∼6 months following a giant outburst. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A NEW LOW MAGNETIC FIELD MAGNETAR: THE 2011 OUTBURST OF SWIFT J1822.3–1606.
- Author
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Rea, N., Israel, G. L., Esposito, P., Pons, J. A., Camero-Arranz, A., Mignani, R. P., Turolla, R., Zane, S., Burgay, M., Possenti, A., Campana, S., Enoto, T., Gehrels, N., Göğüş, E., Götz, D., Kouveliotou, C., Makishima, K., Mereghetti, S., Oates, S. R., and Palmer, D. M.
- Subjects
MAGNETARS ,STARBURSTS ,X-ray bursts ,X-ray astronomy ,GALACTIC X-ray sources - Abstract
We report on the long-term X-ray monitoring with Swift, RXTE, Suzaku, Chandra, and XMM-Newton of the outburst of the newly discovered magnetar Swift J1822.3–1606 (SGR 1822–1606), from the first observations soon after the detection of the short X-ray bursts which led to its discovery, through the first stages of its outburst decay (covering the time span from 2011 July until the end of 2012 April). We also report on archival ROSAT observations which detected the source during its likely quiescent state, and on upper limits on Swift J1822.3–1606's radio-pulsed and optical emission during outburst, with the Green Bank Telescope and the Gran Telescopio Canarias, respectively. Our X-ray timing analysis finds the source rotating with a period of P = 8.43772016(2) s and a period derivative s s
–1 , which implies an inferred dipolar surface magnetic field of B ≃ 2.7 × 1013 G at the equator. This measurement makes Swift J1822.3–1606 the second lowest magnetic field magnetar (after SGR 0418+5729). Following the flux and spectral evolution from the beginning of the outburst, we find that the flux decreased by about an order of magnitude, with a subtle softening of the spectrum, both typical of the outburst decay of magnetars. By modeling the secular thermal evolution of Swift J1822.3–1606, we find that the observed timing properties of the source, as well as its quiescent X-ray luminosity, can be reproduced if it was born with a poloidal and crustal toroidal fields of Bp ∼ 1.5 × 1014 G and Btor ∼ 7 × 1014 G, respectively, and if its current age is ∼550 kyr. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. NEW TORQUE REVERSAL AND SPIN-UP OF 4U 1626-67 OBSERVED BY FERMI/GAMMA-RAY BURST MONITOR AND SWIFT/BURST ALERT TELESCOPE.
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A., Finger, M. H., Ikhsanov, N. R., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., and Beklen, E.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. OBSERVATIONS OF THE HIGH-MASS X-RAY BINARY A 0535+26 IN QUIESCENCE
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, Ascension [Institut de Ciencies de l'Espai, (IEEC-CSIC), Campus UAB, Fac. de Ciencies, Torre C5, parell, 2a planta, E-08193 Barcelona (Spain)]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. ORBITAL DECAY AND EVIDENCE OF DISK FORMATION IN THE X-RAY BINARY PULSAR OAO 1657-415
- Author
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Camero-Arranz, A [Institut de Ciencies de l'Espai (CSIC-IEEC), Campus UAB, Facultat de Ciencies, Torre C5-parell, E-08193, Barcelona (Spain)]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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