8 research outputs found
Observations of the Transient X-ray Pulsar KS 1947+300 by the INTEGRAL and RXTE Observatories
We analyze the observations of the X-ray pulsar KS 1947+300 performed by the
INTEGRAL and RXTE observatories over a wide (3-100 keV) X-ray energy range. The
shape of the pulse profile was found to depend on the luminosity of the source.
Based on the model of a magnetized neutron star, we study the characteristics
of the pulsar using the change in its spin-up rate. We estimated the magnetic
field strength of the pulsar and the distance to the binary.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, Astronomy Letters, 31, 88-97 (2005
INTEGRAL high energy monitoring of the X-ray burster KS 1741-293
KS 1741-293, discovered in 1989 by the X-ray camera TTM in the Kvant module
of the Mir space station and identified as an X-ray burster, has not been
detected in the hard X band until the advent of the INTEGRAL observatory.
Moreover this source has been recently object of scientific discussion, being
also associated to a nearby extended radio source that in principle could be
the supernova remnant produced by the accretion induced collapse in the binary
system. Our long term monitoring with INTEGRAL, covering the period from
February 2003 to May 2005, confirms that KS 1741-293 is transient in soft and
hard X band. When the source is active, from a simultaneous JEM-X and IBIS data
analysis, we provide a wide band spectrum from 5 to 100 keV, that can be fit by
a two component model, a multiple blackbody for the soft emission and a
Comptonized or a cut-off power law model for the hard component. Finally, by
the detection of two X-ray bursters with JEM-X, we confirm the bursting nature
of KS 1741-293, including this source in the class of the hard tailed X-ray
bursters.Comment: 7 pages, accepted for publication on MNRA
