418 research outputs found

    Discovery of metal line emission from the Red star in IP Peg during outburst maximum

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    Observations of the eclipsing dwarf nova IP Peg during outburst reveal metal lines in emission, such as Mg II 4481 A. Analysis using Doppler tomography locates emission of helium and metal lines on the inner Roche lobe of the secondary star. Such multi-line Roche-lobe imaging presents a new tool in mapping the red star's ionization structure.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication as a Letter in A&A (May 1999

    Spiral shocks in the accretion disc of IP Peg during outburst maximum

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    In response to our recent discovery of spiral arms in the accretion disc of IP Peg during rise to outburst, we have obtained time-resolved spectrophotometry of IP Peg during outburst maximum. In particular, indirect imaging of HeII 4686, using Doppler tomography, shows a two-arm spiral pattern on the disc image, which confirms repeatability over different outbursts. The jump in HeII intensity (a factor of more than two) and in velocity (~200--300 km/s) clarifies the shock nature of the spiral structure. The HeII shocks show an azimuthal extent of ~90 degrees, a shallow power-law emissivity ~V^{-1}, an upper limit of 30 degrees in opening angle, and a flux contribution of 15 per cent of the total disc emission. We discuss the results in view of recent simulations of accretion discs which show that spiral shocks can be raised in the accretion disc by the secondary star.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS journal paper. in pres

    The emission-line pulse pattern in the intermediate polar RX J0558

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    We observed the intermediate polar RX J0558+53 with the 4.2m WHT and find in the pulsed emission lines, a ``corkscrew'' pattern, which indicates a two-pole white dwarf accretion. The ``corkscrew'' pattern consists of two emission-line pulses, separated by half the white dwarf spin period, and moving from red to blue velocities. The detected emission-line pulsations have an amplitude of 1.1--2.7 per cent in the He II and Balmer emission lines on the 545-s spin period of the white dwarf which compare to 3.5-4.8 per cent for the continuum double-peak pulsations. We image the emission-line pulse pattern and is shown to lag the continuum pulse by 0.12 spin cycles. We interpret the pattern by invoking an accretion curtain from the disrupted, inner disc to the two poles of the magnetic white dwarf. The semi-amplitude of the He II pulse of 408+-35 km/s can be used to constrain the size of the magnetosphere, R ~ 4.1 x 10^4 km, and the magnetic moment of the white dwarf (~2.4 10^32 G cm^3). Power spectra show dominant frequencies at 2 \omega and 2 (\omega-\Omega) which suggest reprocessing of the white dwarf's illuminating beams in the accretion disc. Finally, the steady He II emission line shows a strong sinusoidal component moving from red to blue on the orbital period, with a width similar to that expected from irradiation of the secondary star. Imaging of the emission lines indicate illuminated locations at the inner side of the red star and the back side of the accretion disc.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS journal paper. in pres

    The rotational broadening and the mass of the donor star of GRS 1915+105

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    The binary parameters of the microquasar GRS 1915+105 have been determined by the detection of Doppler-shifted 12CO and 13CO lines in its K-band spectrum (Greiner et al., 2001, Nature, 414, 522). Here, we present further analysis of the same K-band VLT spectra and we derive a rotational broadening of the donor star of V sin i=26+-3 km/s from the 12CO/13CO lines. Assuming that the K-type star is tidally locked to the black hole and is filling its Roche-lobe surface, then the implied mass ratio is q = M_d/M_x = 0.058+-0.033. This result, combined with (P, K, i)=(33.5 d, 140 km/s, 66 deg) gives a more refined mass estimate for the black hole, Mx=14.0+4.4MM_x=14.0+-4.4 M_{\odot}, than previously estimated, using an inclination of i=66+-2 deg (Fender et al. 1999) as derived from the orientation of the radio jets and a more accurate distance. The mass for the early K-type giant star is Md=0.81±0.53MM_d=0.81\pm0.53 M_{\odot}, consistent with a more evolved stripped-giant donor star in GRS 1915+105 than, for example, the donor star of the prototype black-hole X-ray transient, V404 Cyg which has the longest binary period after GRS 1915+105.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, A&A Lette

    Eclipse maps of spiral shocks in the accretion disc of IP Pegasi in outburst

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    Eclipse lightcurves of the dwarf nova IP Peg during the November 1996 outburst are analysed with eclipse mapping techniques to constrain the location and investigate the spatial structure of the spiral shocks observed in the Doppler tomograms (Harlaftis et al. 1999). Eclipse maps in the blue continuum and in the CIII+NIII 4650 emission line show two asymmetric arcs of \sim 90 degrees in azimuth and extending from intermediate to the outer disc regions (R \simeq 0.2 - 0.6 R_{L1}, where R_{L1} is the distance from disc centre to the inner Lagrangian point) which are interpreted as being the spiral shocks seen in the Doppler tomograms. The HeII 4686 eclipse map also shows two asymmetric arcs diluted by a central brightness source. The central source probably corresponds to the low-velocity component seen in the Doppler tomogram and is understood in terms of gas outflow in a wind emanating from the inner parts of the disc. We estimate that the spirals contribute about 16 and 30 per cent of the total line flux, respectively, for the HeII and CIII+NIII lines. Comparison between the Doppler and eclipse maps reveal that the Keplerian velocities derived from the radial position of the shocks are systematically larger than those inferred from the Doppler tomography indicating that the gas in the spiral shocks has sub-Keplerian velocities. We undertake simulations with the aim to investigate the effect of artifacts on the image reconstruction of the spiral structures.Comment: MNRAS, in press. 6 pages, 1 embedded PS and 3 JPEG figures; typed with MNRAS latex styl

    Probing black hole X-ray binaries with the Keck telescopes

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    The advent of the large effective apertures of the Keck telescopes has resulted in the determination with unprecedented accuracy of the mass functions and mass ratios of faint (R ~ 21 mag) X-ray transients (GS 2000+25, GRO J0422+32, Nova Oph 1977, Nova Vel 1993), as well as constraining the main-sequence companion star parameters and producing images of the accretion disks around the black holes.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, SPIE Symposium 4005, in pres

    IUE observations of the 1987 superoutburst of the dwarf nova Z Cha

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    Low resolution IUE observations of the dwarf nova Z Cha during superoutburst are presented. These cover most of the development of the outburst and have sufficient time resolution to probe continuum and line behavior on orbital phase. The observed modulation on this phase is very similar to that observed in the related object OY Car. The results imply the presence of a cool spot on the edge of the edge of the accretion disk, which periodically occults the brighter inner disk. Details of the line behavior suggest that the line originated in an extended wind-emitting region. In contrast to archive spectra obtained in normal outburst, the continuum is fainter and redder, indicating that the entire superoutburst disk may be geometrically thicker than during a normal outburst

    Determining the spectroscopic mass ratio in interacting binaries: Application to X-Ray Nova Sco 1994

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    We present a model for determining the mass ratio in interacting binaries by directly fitting the observed spectrum with synthetic spectra. We make direct use of NextGen model atmospheres intensities which are the most comprehensive and detailed models available for cool stars. We fully take into account the varying temperature and gravity across the secondary star's photosphere, by incorporating the synthetic spectra into the secondary star's Roche geometry. As a result, we determine the exact rotationally broadened spectrum of the secondary star and so eliminate the need for a limb-darkening law, and the uncertainties associated with it. As an example we determine the mass ratio for the well studied soft X-ray transient Nova Sco 1994. In order to obtain a more accurate determination of the mass ratio, which does not depend on assumptions about the rotation profile and limb-darkening coefficients, we use our model to compute the exact rotationally broadened model spectrum, which we compare directly with the observed intermediate resolution spectrum of Nova Sco 1994. We determine the mass ratio of Nova Sco 1994 to be 0.419+/-0.028 (90 percent confidence), which is the most accurate determination of the binary mass ratio in an X-ray binary. This result combined with the binary mass function and inclination angle gives a refined black hole mass of 5.99+\-0.42 Mo (90 percent confidence). We also perform simulations which show that, for an F-type secondary star, the standard rotation profile with zero and continuum value for the line limb-darkening coefficient gives a value for q that brackets the value found using the full geometrical treatment.Comment: 11 pages including 5 figures, accepted by MNRA
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