1. The Ever Changing X-ray Sky: X-ray Transients Observed With BATSE
- Author
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Wilson-Hodge, Colleen A and Rose, M. Franklin
- Subjects
Space Radiation - Abstract
X-ray transients are typically sources in our own galaxy. They are called "transient" because they usually spend more time in quiescence than in outburst. These transients consist of a compact object and a "normal" star in a binary system. The compact objects in some of these systems are known to be neutron stars because they exhibit X-ray bursts or periodic pulsations, Other systems are believed to contain black holes based upon their outburst behavior and in some cases, optical measurements of their masses. The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE), one of 4 instruments on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, was an all-sky instrument sensitive to photons from about 20 keV to 2 MeV, designed primarily to detect gamma-ray bursts. Transient and persistent hard X-ray point sources were extracted from the data using the Earth occultation method to measure source intensities. In this method, the change in count rate in a BATSE detector was measured just before and just after a source location was occulted by the Earth. For long period pulsars (>1 second) Fourier transforms and epoch-folded searches were used to measure pulse frequency and pulsed flux. Using these methods, 3 black hole candidates and 6 X-ray pulsars were discovered with BATSE during its 9 years in orbit. BATSE provided unprecedented temporal coverage in the 20 keV - 2 MeV band, allowing detection of numerous new outbursts of X-ray transients. In this talk, I will describe the BATSE instrument, discuss methods we use to detect hard X-ray sources, and describe observations of X-ray transients.
- Published
- 2001