NuStar Discovery of a cyclotron line in KS 1947+300
Abstract
We present a spectral analysis of three simultaneous Nuclear Spectroscopy Telescope Array and Swift/XRT observations of the transient Be-neutron star binary KS 1947+300 taken during its outburst in 2013/2014. These broadband observations were supported by Swift/XRT monitoring snapshots every three days, which we use to study the evolution of the spectrum over the outburst. We find strong changes of the power-law photon index, which shows a weak trend of softening with increasing X-ray flux. The neutron star shows very strong pulsations with a period of P ≈ 18.8 s. The 0.8–79 keV broadband spectrum can be described by a power law with an exponential cutoff and a blackbody component at low energies. During the second observation we detect a cyclotron resonant scattering feature at 12.5 keV, which is absent in the phase-averaged spectra of observations 1 and 3. Pulse phase-resolved spectroscopy reveals that the strength of the feature changes strongly with pulse phase and is most prominent during the broad minimum of the pulse profile. At the same phases the line also becomes visible in the first and third observation at the same energy. This discovery implies that KS 1947+300 has a magnetic field strength of B ≈ 1.1 × 10^(12) (1 + z) G, which is at the lower end of known cyclotron line sources.
Additional Information
© 2014 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2014 February 12; accepted for publication 2014 March 5; Published 2014 March 19; Issue 2 (2014 April 1). We would like to thank Matthias Kühnel, Ralf Ballhausen, Fritz Schwarm, and Peter Kretschmar for useful discussions. This work was supported under NASA contract No. NNG08FD60C, and made use of data from the NuSTAR mission, a project led by the California Institute of Technology, managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. We thank the NuSTAR Operations, Software, and Calibration teams for support with the execution and analysis of these observations. This research has made use of the NuSTAR Data Analysis Software (NuSTARDAS) jointly developed by the ASI Science Data Center (ASDC, Italy) and the California Institute of Technology (USA). This research has made use of ISIS functions provided by ECAP/Remeis observatory and MIT (http://www.sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de/isis/). We thank the Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt for partial support under DLR grant 50 OR 1113. We thank the anonymous referee for useful comments. Facilities: NuSTAR, SwiftAttached Files
Published - 2041-8205_784_2_L40.pdf
Draft - 1403.1901v1.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:9698c6dbf3736f2bf746c6d1e228541a
|
378.2 kB | Preview Download |
md5:d52b4e27e309ebde441d87035a74fa75
|
238.9 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 44649
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20140403-155508973
- NASA
- NNG08FD60C
- Deutsches Zentrum für Luft-und Raumfahrt (DLR)
- 50 OR 1113
- NASA/JPL/Caltech
- Created
-
2014-04-04Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- NuSTAR, Space Radiation Laboratory
- Other Numbering System Name
- Space Radiation Laboratory
- Other Numbering System Identifier
- 2014-64