Swift/XRT monitoring of five orbital cycles of LS I +61° 303
Open Access
- 10 September 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by EDP Sciences in Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Vol. 474 (2) , 575-578
- https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20078334
Abstract
Context.LS I +61° 303 is one of the most interesting high-mass X-ray binaries owing to its spatially resolved radio emission and its TeV emission, generally attributed to non-thermal particles in an accretion-powered relativistic jet or in the termination shock of the relativistic wind of a young pulsar. Also, the nature of the compact object is still debated. Only LS 5039 and PSR B1259-63 (which hosts a non-accreting millisecond pulsar) have similar characteristics.Aims.We study the X-ray emission from LS I +61° 303 covering both short-term and orbital variability. We also investigate the source spectral properties in the soft X-ray (0.3–10 keV) energy range.Methods.Twenty-five snapshot observations of LS I +61° 303 were collected in 2006 with the XRT instrument on-board the Swift satellite over a period of four months, corresponding to about five orbital cycles. Since individual data sets have too few counts for a meaningful spectral analysis, we extracted a cumulative spectrum.Results.The count rate folded at the orbital phase shows a clear modulation pattern at the 26.5 days period and suggests that the X-ray peak occurs around phase 0.65. Moreover, the X-ray emission appears to be variable on a timescale of ~1 ks. The cumulative spectrum is well described by an absorbed power-law model, with hydrogen column density cm-2 and photon index . No accretion disk signatures, such as an iron line, are found in the spectrum.Keywords
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