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X-ray light curve of the Rapid Burster in a very active Type II burst state

X-ray light curve of the Rapid Burster in a very active Type II burst state


Date: 06 May 2008
Satellite: INTEGRAL
Depicts: light curve in the 3-15 keV band of the Rapid Burster in a very active Type II burst state
Copyright: JEM-X team at the National Space Institute DTU, Copenhagen, data courtesy of Marco Tavani, INAF-IASF Roma

The Rapid Burster (MXB 1730-335) is a recurrent, transient low mass X-ray binary discovered in 1976. The source shows activity for a few weeks, two to three times per year. It is located at a distance of 8 kpc in a globular cluster (Liller 1) in the Galactic centre region.

Low mass X-ray binaries are systems where a compact object, either a neutron star or a black hole, accretes material from a relatively low mass companion star. In this case the compact object is a neutron star.

As the name indicates the source is an X-ray burster. However, X-ray bursts are divided into two classes, not particularly informatively named Type-I and Type-II.

Type-I bursts are thermonuclear flashes in the material accreted on the surface of a neutron star. Currently 88 Galactic systems showing Type-I bursts are known (five of these systems were discovered to be Type-I X-ray bursters by INTEGRAL). One of them is the Rapid Burster which occasionally shows Type-I bursts.

However, the Rapid Burster is also the prototype of the much rarer Type-II burster, where the burst mechanism is quite different. A Type-II burst is due to a instability in the accretion disc, and thus derives its energy from the strong gravitational field near the neutron star.

The Rapid Burster is the only known source to exhibit both Type-I and Type-II bursts. During one of its active periods the bursting pattern evolves, normally starting with Type-I bursts, followed by both Type-I and Type-II bursts, and eventually towards the end going through a phase of very regular, frequent, short Type-II bursts.

The Rapid Burster was observed to be active during INTEGRAL observation of the Galactic centre region in February-March 2008 (see related publication by Kuulkers et al., ATel #1398). The image shows light curves in the 3-15 keV X-ray band from the JEM-X monitor:

  • The upper panel of the plot shows a 3 hour period starting at 04:47, 13 March 2008, where the Rapid Burster did its best to live up to its popular name, firing off 318 Type-II bursts in rapid succession
  • In order to see finer details in the light curve, the middle panel shows a 6× zoom with 44 bursts in 30 minutes (red, 4 second binning), starting at 05:17
  • The lower panel shows 8 bursts in 5 minutes (blue, 2 second binning) starting at 05:23, after again zooming in 6×

Provided by the JEM-X team at the National Space Institute DTU, Copenhagen, data courtesy of Marco Tavani, INAF-IASF Roma.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
19-Apr-2024 03:24 UT

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