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Observations of AXPs and SGRs: 1E 1048.1-5937 and SGR 1806-20 Andrea Tiengo (IASF-MI, Univ. Milano) S. Mereghetti, G. L. Israel, L. Stella, S. Zane, A. Treves, G. Ramsay, M. Feroci, R. Turolla, M. Cropper Palermo, 2003 October 14 th
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Soft Gamma-ray Repeaters & Anomalous X-ray Pulsars SGRsAXPs Soft Gamma-ray Repeaters & Anomalous X-ray Pulsars SGRs AXPs Identified as subclass of: Soft burst spectrum Repetition of bursts from same position Gamma-Ray BurstsX-Ray Pulsars Period 5-12 s and spin-down No bright optical counterpart Soft spectrum and stable flux But then discovery of: SGR-like burstsAXP-like counterparts SGRs and AXPs are the same class of objects! Interpretations: Magnetar or NS accreting from fall-back disc
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No narrow features in EPIC spectrum Power-law ( =3) + Blackbody (kT=0.65 keV) 5 ks observation performed on 28 Dec 2000 Guaranteed Time observation of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 1E 1048.1-5937 Results (Tiengo, Göhler, Staubert & Mereghetti 2002):
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Flux within 50% from previous observations (SAX, ASCA) No narrow features in EPIC spectrum Power-law ( =3) + Blackbody (kT=0.65 keV) 5 ks observation performed on 28 Dec 2000 Results (Tiengo, Göhler, Staubert & Mereghetti 2002): Guaranteed Time observation of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 1E 1048.1-5937
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SAX ASCA XMM
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Energy dependent pulse profile: pulsed fraction 75% for E 1.5keV Flux within 50% from previous observations (SAX, ASCA) No narrow features in EPIC spectrum Power-law ( =3) + Blackbody (kT=0.65 keV) 5 ks observation performed on 28 Dec 2000 Results (Tiengo, Göhler, Staubert & Mereghetti 2002): Guaranteed Time observation of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 1E 1048.1-5937
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Same spectrum as GT observation No narrow features in EPIC and RGS spectra Guest Observer (AO2) observation of 1E 1048-593 70 ks (43 ks with low bkg) observation in June 2003
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Same spectrum as GT observation No narrow features in EPIC and RGS spectra Flux a factor 2 higher than in GT observation Guest Observer observation of 1E 1048-593 70 ks (43 ks with low bkg) observation in June 2003 BUT:
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SAX ASCA XMM GT XMM GO Gavriil, Kaspi & Woods (2002) reported bursts from 1E1048.1-5937 in Nov 2001
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Same spectrum as GT observation No narrow features in EPIC and RGS spectra BUT Guest Observer observation of 1E 1048-593 70 ks (43 ks with low bkg) observation in June 2003 Lower pulsed fraction: 50% Flux a factor 2 higher than in GT observation
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Pulse profiles GT observationGO observation
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The new AXP XTE J1810-297 New AXP (P = 5.54 s) discovered by RXTE in Aug 03 (Ibrahim et al. 2003) From Einstein, ROSAT and ASCA archival data: it was ~100 times fainter! (Gotthelf et al. 2003) XTE J1810-297 is a Transient AXP XMM ToO on Sep 8 (Tiengo & Mereghetti 2003, ATEL 193; Gotthelf et al. 2003, astro-ph/0309745) : XTE J1810-297 is very similar to 1E 1048.1-5937
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Spectrum XTE J1810-2971E 1048.1-5937 (GO data) N H = 1.05 0.05 x 10 22 cm –2 Γ= 3.7 0.2 kT= 0.67 0.01 keV F 2-10 keV = 3 x 10 -11 erg cm –2 s –1 N H = 1.14 0.01 x 10 22 cm –2 Γ= 3.40 0.03 kT= 0.64 0.01 keV F 2-10 keV = 10 -11 erg cm –2 s –1
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Pulse profiles XTE J1810-2971E 1048.1-5937 (GO data)
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GO (AO2) observation of SGR 1806-20 30 ks observation in April 2003 but only 5 ks with low bkg Results: Powerlaw spectrum (Γ=1.6, N H =6x10 22 cm -2 ); no BB component No narrow features in EPIC spectrum
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GO (AO2) observation of SGR 1806-20 30 ks observation but only 5 ks with low bkg Results: No narrow features in EPIC spectrum Powerlaw spectrum (no BB component) 1 burst detected (2-10 keV fluence 10 -9 erg cm -2 )
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GO (AO2) observation of SGR 1806-20 30 ks observation but only 5 ks with low bkg Results: No narrow features in EPIC spectrum Powerlaw spectrum (no BB component) 20 ks obs. performed on 7 Oct and 50 ks accepted in AO-3 1 burst detected (2-10 keV fluence 10 -9 erg cm -2 )
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CONCLUSIONS: The flux of 1E 1048.1+5937 is confirmed to be variable (more than a factor 2) First evidence for variation in pulsed fraction of 1E 1048.1-5937 (from 90% to 50%) AXPs are more variable than previously thought! 1E 1048.1-5937 is very similar to the “transient AXP” XTE J1810-297 Are these variations related to bursts, as in SGRs? AXP 1E 2259+586 became 1 order of magnitude brighter and changed pulse profile after bursts (Kaspi et al. 2003)
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