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IGR J17448-3232 point source: A blazar candidate viewed through the Galactic centre?

Authors :
Curran, P. A.
Chaty, S.
Heras, J. A. Zurita
Tomsick, J. A.
Maccarone, T. J.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The error region of the INTEGRAL source, IGR J17448-3232, contains an X-ray point source at the edge of a ~3' radius extended X-ray source. It has been suggested that the extended emission is a young supernovae remnant (SNR) while the point source may be an isolated neutron star, associated with the SNR, that received a kick when the supernova occurred. We identify the infrared counterpart of the X-ray point source, visible from 2.2 to 24 microns, and place limits on the flux at longer wavelengths by comparison with radio catalogues. Multi-wavelength spectral modeling shows that the data are consistent with a reddened and absorbed single power law over five orders of magnitude in frequency. This implies non-thermal, possibly synchrotron emission that renders the previous identification of this source as a possible pulsar, and its association to the SNR, unlikely; we instead propose that the emission may be due to a blazar viewed through the plane of the Galaxy.<br />Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; accepted to Proceedings of Science for the meeting "The Extreme and Variable High Energy Sky" (Sardinia, September 2011)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1110.1474
Document Type :
Working Paper