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NuSTAR Hard X-ray Observation of the Gamma-ray Binary Candidate HESS J1832-093

Authors :
Mori, Kaya
Gotthelf, E. V.
Hailey, Charles J.
Hord, Ben J.
Wilhelmi, Emma de Ona
Rahoui, Farid
Tomsick, John A.
Zhang, Shuo
Hong, Jaesub
Garvin, Amani M.
Boggs, Steven E.
Christensen, Finn E.
Craig, William W.
Harrison, Fiona A.
Stern, Daniel
Zhang, William W.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present a hard X-ray observation of the TeV gamma-ray binary candidate HESS J1832-093 coincident with supernova remnant (SNR) G22.7-0.2 using the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). Non-thermal X-ray emission from XMMU J183245-0921539, the X-ray source associated with HESS J1832-093, is detected up to ~30 keV and is well-described by an absorbed power-law model with the best-fit photon index $\Gamma = 1.5\pm0.1$. A re-analysis of archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data finds that the long-term X-ray flux increase of XMMU J183245-0921539 is $50^{+40}_{-20}$% (90% C.L.), much less than previously reported. A search for a pulsar spin period or binary orbit modulation yields no significant signal to a pulse fraction limit of fp < 19% in the range 4 ms < P < 40 ks. No red noise is detected in the FFT power spectrum to suggest active accretion from a binary system. While further evidence is required, we argue that the X-ray and gamma-ray properties of XMMU J183245-0921539 are most consistent with a non-accreting binary generating synchrotron X- rays from particle acceleration in the shock formed as a result of the pulsar and stellar wind collision. We also report on three nearby hard X-ray sources, one of which may be associated with diffuse emission from a fast-moving supernova fragment interacting with a dense molecular cloud.<br />Comment: ApJ in press. 9 pages

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1710.02118
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa8d15