1,925 results on '"Ubertini P"'
Search Results
202. Soft X and Gamma ray emission from TeV sources observed with Swift and INTEGRAL
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De Rosa, A., Ubertini, P., Bazzano, A., Bassani, L., Landi, R., Malizia, A., and Stephen, J. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The soft X-ray and soft gamma observations of the new discovered TeV sources by HESS and MAGIC are crucial to discriminate between various emitting scenarios and to fully understand their nature. The INTEGRAL Observatory has regularly observed the entire galactic plane during the first 1000 day in orbit providing a survey in the 20-100 keV range resulted in a soft gamma-ray sky populated with more than 200 sources. In the case of HESS J1813-178 INTEGRAL found the hard X-ray counterpart IGR J18135-1751 and Swift/XRT Telescope performed follow-up observations on this source. Here we present the soft/hard X-ray spectral study. We reported on the INTEGRAL observation of LS 5039, the first microquasar that have been observed by HESS up to now., Comment: Advances of Space Research (AdSpR, Elsevier) devoted to results presented in Session E1.4 of the COSPAR 2006 assembly in Beijing, edited by Jacco Vink and Parviz Ghavamian
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- 2006
203. The first detection of Compton Reflection in the Low-Mass X-ray Binary 4U1705-44 with INTEGRAL and BeppoSAX
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Fiocchi, Mariateresa, Bazzano, Angela, Ubertini, Pietro, and Zdziarski, Andrzej A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present data from INTEGRAL and BeppoSAX satellites showing spectral state transitions of the neutron-star, atoll-type, low-mass X-ray binary 1705-44. Its energy spectrum can be described as the sum of one or two blackbody components, a 6.4-keV Fe line, and a component due to thermal Comptonization. In addition, and for the first time in this source, we find a strong signature of Compton reflection, presumably due to illumination of the optically-thick accretion disk by the Comptonization spectrum. The two blackbody components, which the soft-state data require, presumably arise from both the disk and the neutron-star surface. The Comptonization probably takes place in a hot inner flow irradiated by some of the blackbody photons. The spectral transitions are shown to be associated with variations in the bolometric luminosity, most likely proportional to the accretion rate. Indipendentely from the spectral state, we also see changes in the temperature of the Comptonizing electrons and the strength of Compton reflection., Comment: accepted ApJ
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- 2006
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204. INTEGRAL and Swift observations of the supergiant fast X-ray transient AXJ1845.0-0433=IGRJ18450-0435
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Sguera, V., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Landi, R., Malizia, A., Barlow, E. J., Clark, D. J., Hill, A. B., and Molina, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Context: AXJ1845.0-0433 was discovered by ASCA in 1993 during fast outburst activity characterized by several flares on short timescales. Up to now, the source was not detected again by any X-ray mission. Its optical counterpart is suggested to be an O9.5I supergiant star, which is the only remarkable object found inside the ASCA error box. Aims: To detect and characterize new fast outbursts of AXJ1845.0-0433 and confirm its supergiant HMXB nature, using INTEGRAL and archival Swift XRT observations. Methods: We performed an analysis of INTEGRAL IBIS and JEM-X data with OSA 5.1 as well as an analysis of archive Swift XRT data. Results: We report on fast flaring activity from the source on timescales of a few tens of minutes, the first to be reported since its discovery in 1993. Two outbursts have been detected by INTEGRAL (Apr 2005 and Apr 2006) with similar peak fluxes and peak luminosities of 80 mCrab and 9.3X10^35 erg s^-1 (20--40 keV), respectively. Two other outbursts were detected by Swift XRT on Nov 2005 and Mar 2006. The refined Swift XRT position of AXJ1845.0-0433 confirms its association with the supergiant star previously proposed as optical counterpart. Conclusions: Our INTEGRAL and Swift results fully confirm the supergiant HMXB nature of AXJ1845.0-0433 which can therefore be classified as a supergiant fast X-ray transient. Moreover they provide for the first time evidence of its recurrent fast transient behaviour., Comment: 5 pages,5 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2006
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205. A Possible Magnetar Nature for IGR J16358-4726
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Patel, S. K., Zurita, J., Del Santo, M., Finger, M., Kouveliotou, C., Eichler, D., Gogus, E., Ubertini, P., Walter, R., Woods, P., Wilson, C. A., Wachter, S., and Bazzano, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present detailed spectral and timing analysis of the hard x-ray transient IGR J16358-4726 using multi-satellite archival observations. A study of the source flux time history over 6 years, suggests that lower luminosity transient outbursts can be occuring in intervals of at most 1 year. Joint spectral fits of the higher luminosity outburst using simultaneous Chandra/ACIS and INTEGRAL/ISGRI data reveal a spectrum well described by an absorbed power law model with a high energy cut-off plus an Fe line. We detected the 1.6 hour pulsations initially reported using Chandra/ACIS also in the INTEGRAL/ISGRI light curve and in subsequent XMM-Newton observations. Using the INTEGRAL data we identified a spin up of 94 s (dP/dt = 1.6E-4), which strongly points to a neutron star nature for IGR J16358-4726. Assuming that the spin up is due to disc accretion, we estimate that the source magnetic field ranges between 10^13 - 10^15 G, depending on its distance, possibly supporting a magnetar nature for IGR J16358-4726., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 34 pgs, 14 figures, 4 tables
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- 2006
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206. SWIFT/XRT follow-up observations of INTEGRAL AGNs
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Landi, R., Malizia, A., Bassani, L., Masetti, N., Stephen, J. B., Gianotti, F., Schiavone, F., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In five years of operation, data from INTEGRAL has been used to discover a large number of gamma-ray sources, a substantial fraction of which have turned out to be active galactic nuclei (AGN). Recently Bassani et al. (2006) have presented a sample of around 60 AGNs of which some still lack optical identification or information in the X-ray band. In this work we present X-ray data for 8 objects acquired with the XRT telescope on-board Swift satellite. The XRT positioning has allowed us to identify the optical counterparts and to classify their types through follow-up measurements. Analysis of these data has also provided information on their spectra below 10 keV., Comment: 4 pages, submitted proceeding of the 6th INTEGRAL Workshop "The Obscured Universe" July 2-8, 2006 Space Research Institute Moscow, Russia
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- 2006
207. Spectral analysis of the Low-Mass X-ray Binary 4U~1705--44
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Fiocchi, M., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., and federici, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
\integral and \sax observations of the neutron-star LMXB 4U~1705--44 have been analysed to deeply investigate the spectral state transitions nature. Its energy spectrum can be described as the sum of one or two blackbody, a 6.4-keV Fe line and a component due to thermal Comptonization. For the first time in this source, we find a strong signature of Compton reflection, presumably due to illumination of the optically-thick accretion disk by the Comptonized spectrum. Detection of two blackbody component in the soft states could originate in the disk and the neutron-star surface, and the Comptonized component arises from a hot inner flow with the seed photons coming from the disk and/or the neutron-star surface. The spectral transitions are shown to be associated with variations in the accretion rate, which changes in turn the temperature of the Comptonizing electrons and the strength of Compton reflection., Comment: The 6th INTEGRAL Workshop 2006. The 6th INTEGRAL Workshop 2006, submitted
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- 2006
208. Following the Colour of the Low Mass X-ray Binary 4U 1820-30 with INTEGRAL
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Tarana, Antonella, Bazzano, Angela, Ubertini, Pietro, Zdziarski, A. Andrzej, and Federici, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The 4-200 keV spectral and temporal behaviour of the low mass X-ray binary 4U 1820-30 has been studied with INTEGRAL during 2003-2005. This source as been observed in both the soft (banana) and hard (island) spectral states. A high energy tail above 50 keV in the hard state has been revealed for the first time. This places the source in the category of X-ray bursters showing high-energy emission. The tail can be modeled as a soft power law component, with the photon index of ~ 2.4, on top of thermal Comptonization emission from a plasma with the electron temperature of kT_e ~ 6 keV and optical depth of $\tau ~ 4. Alternatively, but at a lower goodness of the fit, the hard-state broad band spectrum can be accounted for by emission from a hybrid, thermal-nonthermal, plasma. During the observations, the source spent most of the time in the soft state, as previously reported and the $\ge$4 keV spectra can be represented by thermal Comptonization with kT_e ~ 3 keV and $\tau ~ 6-7., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted proceeding of the 6th INTEGRAL Workshop "The Obscured Universe" July 2-8, 2006 Space Research Institute Moscow, Russia
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- 2006
209. Observing the high energy behaviour of the low mass X-ray binary XB 1832-330 with INTEGRAL
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Tarana, Antonella, Bazzano, Angela, Ubertini, Pietro, and Federici, Memmo
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report INTEGRAL/IBIS results on temporal and spectral behaviour of the Low Mass X-ray Binary XB 1832-330 located in the globular cluster NGC 6652. During the 2003-2005 monitoring of the Galactic Centre, the source shows a weak flux variability and an everage flux in the 20-150 keV of about 2*10^{-10} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}. The overall energy spectrum extends up to 150 keV and is well described by a Comptonization model with an electrons temperature of $\sim$ 22 keV and a plasma optical depth of 1.8. We thus confirm the persistent nature of this burtser., Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, submitted proceeding of the 6th INTEGRAL Workshop "The Obscured Universe" July 2-8, 2006 Space Research Institute Moscow, Russia
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- 2006
210. Hard tail detection in the LMXB 4U1636-53 from INTEGRAL
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Fiocchi, M., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., and federici, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent INTEGRAL observations and archival BeppoSAX data have been analyzed to deeply investigate the hard X-ray behavior of the neutron star, atoll type, low mass X-ray Binary 4U1636-53. Our investigation in three different periods outline three corresponding different sates. Infact, the source was detected in both the canonical high and low state and moreover in one occasion \integral spectrum shows, for first time in this source, a hard tail dominating the emission above 30 keV. This spectrum is fitted as the sum of a Comptonized component similar to soft state and a power-law component ($\Gamma=2.76$), indicating the presence of a non thermal electron distribution of velocities., Comment: The 6th INTEGRAL Workshop 2006. The 6th INTEGRAL Workshop 2006, submitted
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- 2006
211. INTEGRAL spectral variability study of the atoll 4U 1820-30: first detection of hard X-ray emission
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Tarana, Antonella, Bazzano, Angela, Ubertini, Pietro, and Zdziarski, Andrzej A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the 4-200 keV spectral and temporal behaviour of the low mass X-ray binary 4U 1820-30 with INTEGRAL during 2003-2005. This source as been observed in both the soft (banana) and hard (island) spectral states. A high energy tail, above 50 keV, in the hard state has been observed for the first time. This places the source in the category of X-ray bursters showing high-energy emission. The tail can be modeled as a soft power law component, with the photon index of ~2.4, on top of thermal Comptonization emission from a plasma with the electron temperature of kT_e~6 keV and optical depth of \tau~4. Alternatively, but at a lower goodness of the fit, the hard-state broad band spectrum can be accounted for by emission from a hybrid, thermal-nonthermal, plasma. During this monitoring the source spent most of the time in the soft state, usual for this source, and the >~4 keV spectra are represented by thermal Comptonization with kT_e~3 keV and \tau~6-7., Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by ApJ
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- 2006
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212. Unveiling the nature of INTEGRAL objects through optical spectroscopy. V. Identification and properties of 21 southern hard X-ray sources
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Masetti, N., Morelli, L., Palazzi, E., Galaz, G., Bassani, L., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Israel, G. L., Landi, R., Malizia, A., Minniti, D., Schiavone, F., Stephen, J. B., Ubertini, P., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Optical spectroscopic identification of the nature of 21 unidentified southern hard X-ray objects is reported here in the framework of our campaign aimed at determining the nature of newly-discovered and/or unidentified sources detected by INTEGRAL. Our results show that 5 of these objects are magnetic Cataclysmic Variables (CVs), 4 are High-Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs; one of which is in the Large Magellanic Cloud) and 12 are Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs). When feasible, the main physical parameters for these hard X-ray sources are also computed using the multiwavelength information available in the literature. These identifications further underscore the importance of INTEGRAL in the study of the hard X-ray spectrum of AGNs, HMXBs and CVs, and the usefulness of a strategy of catalogues cross-correlation plus optical spectroscopy to securely pinpoint the actual nature of the X-ray sources detected with INTEGRAL., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication on A&A, main journal. Figures 1 and 2 and Table 1 will only appear on the on-line version of the paper
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- 2006
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213. A Hard X-ray View on Scorpius X-1 with INTEGRAL: non-Thermal Emission ?
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Di Salvo, T., Goldoni, P., Stella, L., van der Klis, M., Bazzano, A., Burderi, L., Farinelli, R., Frontera, F., Israel, G. L., Méndez, Mirabel, F., Robba, N. R., Sizun, P., Ubertini, P., and Lewin, W. H. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present here simultaneous INTEGRAL/RXTE observations of Sco X-1, and in particular a study of the hard X-ray emission of the source and its correlation with the position in the Z-track of the X-ray color-color diagram. We find that the hard X-ray (above about 30 keV) emission of Sco X-1 is dominated by a power-law component with a photon index of ~3. The flux in the power-law component slightly decreases when the source moves in the color-color diagram in the sense of increasing inferred mass accretion rate from the horizontal branch to the normal branch/flaring branch vertex. It becomes not significantly detectable in the flaring branch, where its flux has decreased by about an order of magnitude. These results present close analogies to the behavior of GX 17+2, one of so-called Sco-like Z sources. Finally, the hard power law in the spectrum of Sco X-1 does not show any evidence of a high energy cutoff up to 100 - 200 keV, strongly suggesting a non-thermal origin of this component., Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures. Accepted for publication by ApJ Letters
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- 2006
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214. INTEGRAL observations of the cosmic X-ray background in the 5-100 keV range via occultation by the Earth
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Churazov, E., Sunyaev, R., Revnivtsev, M., Sazonov, S., Molkov, S., Grebenev, S., Winkler, C., Parmar, A., Bazzano, A., Falanga, M., Gros, A., Lebrun, F., Natalucci, L., Ubertini, P., Roques, J. -P., Bouchet, L., Jourdain, E., Knoedlseder, J., Diehl, R., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Brandt, S., Lund, N., Westergaard, N. J., Neronov, A., Turler, M., Chernyakova, M., Walter, R., Produit, N., Mowlavi, N., Mas-Hesse, J. M., Domingo, A., Gehrels, N., Kuulkers, E., Kretschmar, P., and Schmidt, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the spectrum of the cosmic X-ray background (CXB) in energy range $\sim$5-100 keV. Early in 2006 the INTEGRAL observatory performed a series of four 30ksec observations with the Earth disk crossing the field of view of the instruments. The modulation of the aperture flux due to occultation of extragalactic objects by the Earth disk was used to obtain the spectrum of the Cosmic X-ray Background(CXB). Various sources of contamination were evaluated, including compact sources, Galactic Ridge emission, CXB reflection by the Earth atmosphere, cosmic ray induced emission by the Earth atmosphere and the Earth auroral emission. The spectrum of the cosmic X-ray background in the energy band 5-100 keV is obtained. The shape of the spectrum is consistent with that obtained previously by the HEAO-1 observatory, while the normalization is $\sim$10% higher. This difference in normalization can (at least partly) be traced to the different assumptions on the absolute flux from the Crab Nebulae. The increase relative to the earlier adopted value of the absolute flux of the CXB near the energy of maximum luminosity (20-50 keV) has direct implications for the energy release of supermassive black holes in the Universe and their growth at the epoch of the CXB origin., Comment: A&A, 14 pages, 12 figues
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- 2006
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215. Integral/Ibis Census of the Sky Beyond 100 kev
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Bazzano, A., Stephen, J. B., Fiocchi, M., Bird, A. J., Bassani, L., Dean, A. J., Malizia, A., Ubertini, P., Lebrun, F., Walter, R., and Winkler, C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the first census of INTEGRAL/IBIS detections ($\gtrsim 4\sigma$ significance) above 100 keV based on the Core Program and public Open time observations up to April 2005. There are 49 sources detected in the 100-150 keV band of which 14 are also seen in the 150-300 keV range. The low energy sample is dominated by X-ray binary systems of both low and high mass, but also includes 10 active galaxies. Of the binary systems that are detected above 150 keV, more than 50% are associated with black hole candidates, often reported as microquasars. The present survey results are then used to construct LogN-LogS curves for galactic and extragalactic objects in the 100-150 keV band: above a 1 mCrab sensitivity limit we expect that around 200 galactic sources and almost 350 active galaxies populate the sky above 100 keV. While the contribution of individual point sources to the total Galactic emission has been estimated to be around 70-80% between 100-300 keV, we find that active galaxies detected above 1 mCrab account for only about 3% of the cosmic hard X-ray background in the 100-150 keV band., Comment: accepted ApJ
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- 2006
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216. First broad band study of the mysterious source 1E 1743.1-2843
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Del Santo, M., Sidoli, L., Bazzano, A., Cocchi, M., De Cesare, G., Paizis, A., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In the last years, the persistent source 1E 1743.1-2843 has been observed in the X-rays, but never above 20 keV. In previous works, it was stressed that a possible high energy emission could give further indications on the accreting object nature which remains still unknown. We present here more than two years of 1E 1743.1-2843 monitoring with INTEGRAL/IBIS as well as public XMM-Newton and Chandra X-ray observations. The temporal study in the 20-40 keV band shows a rather constant flux on few months time scale. Based on this result we have performed the broad-band spectral analysis using EPIC/IBIS non simultaneous data and ACIS-I/IBIS data collected during 2004. In ~2 Ms, we report a detection of 6 sigma in the energy range 35-70 keV. The first broad-band study (2-70 keV) shows a steep slope (~3) and a black body temperature of 1.7 keV. Combining spectral parameters and discussion about the luminosity evaluations for different possible distances, our conclusions are in favour of a LMXB system with a neutron star at distance higher than the Galactic Centre, even though a firm conclusion can not be stated., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2006
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217. Swift/XRT follow-up observations of TeV sources of the HESS Inner Galaxy survey
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Landi, R., Bassani, L., Malizia, A., Masetti, N., Stephen, J. B., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Bird, A. J., and Dean, A. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In order to provide a firm identification of the newly discovered Galactic TeV sources, a search for counterparts in a broad band from soft X-ray to soft gamma-rays is crucial as data in these wavebands allow us to distinguish between different types of suggested models (for example leptonic versus hadronic) and, in turn, to disentangle their nature. In this paper, we report the results of a set of follow-up observations performed by the Swift/X-Ray Telescope (XRT) on seven sources recently discovered by HESS, in the range from few hundred GeV to about 10 TeV, during the inner Galaxy survey (Aharonian et al. 2006). In all, but one case, we detect X-ray sources inside or close-by the extended TeV emitting region. All these putative X-ray counterparts have accurate arc-second location and are consistent with being point sources. The main result of our search is the discovery that three of them are located at the center of the diffuse radio emission of the supernova remnants, which have been spatially associated to these TeV objects. HESS J1640-465, HESS J1834-087 and HESS J1813-178 show this evidence, suggestive of a possible Pulsar Wind Nebula association., Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2006
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218. Disc-Jet coupling in the LMXB 4U1636-53 from INTEGRAL
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Fiocchi, Mariateresa, Bazzano, Angela, Ubertini, Pietro, and Jean, Pierre
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the spectral analysis results of the neutron star, atoll type, low mass X-ray Binary 4U1636-53 observed by INTEGRAL and BeppoSAX satellites. Spectral behavior in three different epochs corresponding to three different spectral states has been deeply investigated. Two data set spectra show a continuum well described by one or two soft blackbody plus a Comptonized components with changes in the Comptonizing electrons and black body temperature and the accretion rates, which are typical of the spectral transitions from high to low state. In one occasion INTEGRAL spectrum shows, for first time in this source, a hard tail dominating the emission above 30 keV. The total spectrum is fitted as the sum of a Comptonized component similar to soft state and a power-law component (Gamma=2.76), indicating the presence of a non thermal electron distribution of velocities. In this case, a comparison with hard tails detected in soft states from neutron stars systems and some black hole binaries suggests that a similar mechanism could originate these components in both cases., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. accepted ApJ
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- 2006
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219. The INTEGRAL - HESS/MAGIC connection: a new class of cosmic high energy accelerators from keV to TeV
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Ubertini, Pietro
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The recent completion and operation of the High Energy Stereoscopic System, an array of ground based imaging Cherenkov telescopes, has provided a survey with unprecedented sensitivity of the inner part of the Galaxy and revealed a new population of very high energy gamma-rays sources emitting at E$>$100 GeV. Most of them were reported to have no known radio or X-ray counterpart and hypothesised to be representative of a new class of dark nucleonic cosmic sources. In fact, very high energy gamma-rays with energies E $>$ 10$^{11}$ eV are the best proof of non-thermal processes in the universe and provide a direct in-site view of matter-radiation interaction at energies by far greater than producible in ground accelerators. At lower energy INTEGRAL has regularly observed the entire galactic plane during the first 1000 day in orbit providing a survey in the 20-100 keV range resulted in a soft gamma-ray sky populated with more than 200 sources, most of them being galactic binaries, either BHC or NS. Very recently, the INTEGRAL new source IGR J18135-1751 has been identified as the soft gamma-ray counterpart of HESS J1813-178 and AXJ1838.0-0655 as the X/gamma-ray counterpart of HESS J1837-069. Detection of non thermal radio, X and gamma-ray emission from these TeV sources is very important to discriminate between various emitting scenarios and, in turn, to fully understand their nature. The implications of these new findings in the high energy Galactic population will be addressed., Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, Workshop - Focusing Telescopes in Nuclear Astrophysics - September 12 - 15, 2005, Espace St. Jacques, Bonifacio, Corsica, France, "Experimental Astronomy", in press
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- 2006
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220. Unveiling the nature of INTEGRAL objects through optical spectroscopy. IV. A study of six new hard X-ray sources
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Masetti, N., Bassani, L., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Malizia, A., Norci, L., Palazzi, E., Schwope, A. D., Stephen, J. B., Ubertini, P., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present further results from our ongoing optical spectrophotometric campaign at the Astronomical Observatory of Bologna in Loiano (Italy) on unidentified hard X-ray sources detected by INTEGRAL. We observed spectroscopically the putative optical counterparts of the INTEGRAL sources IGR J00234+6141, IGR J01583+6713, IGR J06074+2205, IGR J13091+1137 and IGR J20286+2544. We find that the first two are Galactic objects, namely a Cataclysmic Variable at a distance of about 300 pc and a Be/X transient High-Mass X-ray Binary (HMXB) located at about 6.4 kpc, respectively, whereas the last one is identified with MCG +04-48-002, a Starburst/HII galaxy at redshift z = 0.013 hiding a Seyfert 2 nucleus. We identify IGR J13091+1137 as the (likely Seyfert 2 type) active nucleus of galaxy NGC 4992, which we classify as an X-ray Bright, Optically Normal Galaxy; this is the first example of this type of object to be detected by INTEGRAL, and one of the closest of this class. We moreover confirm the possible Be/X nature of IGR J06074+2205, and we estimate it to be at a distance of about 1 kpc. We also reexamine the spectrum of the z = 0.087 elliptical radio galaxy PKS 0352-686, the possible counterpart of the INTEGRAL source IGR J03532-6829, and we find that it is a BL Lac. Physical parameters for these sources are also evaluated by discussing our findings in the context of the available multiwavelength information. These identifications further stress the importance of INTEGRAL in the study of the hard X-ray spectrum of Active Galactic Nuclei, HMXBs and Cataclysmic Variables., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication on A&A, main journal. The quality of Fig. 1 was degraded to fit the arXiv uploads size limits. Revised version matches the A&A corrected proofs
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- 2006
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221. Unveiling supergiant fast X-ray transient sources with INTEGRAL
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Sguera, V., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Ubertini, P., Barlow, E. J., Bassani, L., Clark, D. J., Hill, A. B., Malizia, A., Molina, M., and Stephen, J. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Supergiant high mass X-ray binaries (SGXBs) are believed to be rare objects, as stars in the supergiant phase have a very short lifetime and to date only about a dozen of them have been discovered. They are known to be persistent and bright X-ray sources. INTEGRAL is changing this classical picture as its observations are revealing the presence of a new subclass of SGXBs which have been labelled as supergiant fast X-ray transients (SFXTs) as they are strongly characterized by fast X-ray outbursts lasting less than a day, typically a few hours. We report on IBIS detections of newly discovered fast X-ray outbursts from 10 sources, four of which have been recently optically identified as supergiant high mass X-ray binaries. In particular for one of them, IGR J11215-5952, we observe fast X-ray transient behaviour for the first time. The remaining six sources (IGR J16479-4514, IGR J16418-4532, XTE J1743-363, IGR J16195-4945=AX J161929-4945, AX J1749.1-2733, IGR J17407-2808) are still unclassified, however they can be considered as candidate SFXTs because of their similarity to the known SFXTs., Comment: 46 pages, 21 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2006
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222. Spectral states of the X-ray binary IGR J17091--3624 observed by INTEGRAL and RXTE
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Capitanio, F., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Zdziarski, A. A., Bird, A. J., De Cesare, G., Dean, A. J., Stephen, J. B., and Tarana, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
IGR J17091-3624 was discovered in 2003 April by INTEGRAL/IBIS during its Galactic Centre Deep Exposure programme. The source was initially detectable only in the 40--100 keV range, but after two days was also detected in the 15-40 keV range. Its flux had by then increased to 40 mCrab and 25 mCrab in the 15-40 keV and 40-100 keV bands respectively. RXTE observed the source simultaneously on 2003 April 20, with an effective exposure of 2 ksec. We report here the spectral and temporal evolution of the source, which shows a transition between the hard and soft states. We analyse in detail the RXTE/INTEGRAL Comptonised spectrum of the hard state as well as the JEM-X detection of a blackbody component during the source softening. Even though the source spectral behaviour and time variability show a similarity with the outburst of the black-hole candidate IGR J17464-3213 (= H1743-322), observed by INTEGRAL in 2003, the nature of its compact object (BH vs. NS) remains controversial., Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2006
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223. Unveiling the nature of INTEGRAL objects through optical spectroscopy. III. Observations of seven southern sources
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Masetti, N., Pretorius, M. L., Palazzi, E., Bassani, L., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Charles, P. A., Dean, A. J., Malizia, A., Nkundabakura, P., Stephen, J. B., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. The detection, thanks to the INTEGRAL satellite, of a number of new hard X-ray sources calls for the identification of their nature by means of observations at longer wavelengths. Aims. In our continuing campaign to identify longer-wavelength counterparts of these newly-discovered hard X-ray sources detected by INTEGRAL, we observed the putative optical counterparts of seven southern sources at the South African Astronomical Observatory and at the European Southern Observatory. Methods. Optical spectroscopy was performed on all candidates of these X-ray sources. For two of these objects, optical photometry was also acquired. Results. These observations firmly established the nature of four of these sources: we found that IGR J10404-4625 (=LEDA 93974), 4U 1344-60 and IGR J16482-3036 are Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) at redshifts z = 0.0237, 0.013 and 0.0313, respectively, and that 2RXP J130159.6-635806 is a Galactic High-Mass X-ray Binary (HMXB). We also give possible optical identifications for three further objects, namely IGR J11215-5952, IGR J11305-6256 and IGR J16207-5129, which are consistent with being Galactic HMXBs. Physical parameters for these objects are also evaluated by collecting and discussing the available multiwavelength information. Conclusions. The detection of four definite or likely HMXBs out of seven objects in our sample further stresses INTEGRAL's crucial contribution in hunting this class of object. Also, the determination of the extragalactic nature of a substantial fraction of the INTEGRAL survey sources underlines the importance of hard X-ray observations for the study of background AGNs located beyond the 'Zone of Avoidance' of the Galactic Plane., Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication on A&A, main journal. The quality of Fig. 1 was degraded to fit the arXiv uploads size limits. Abstract changed to comply with the new format of A&A abstracts; added a note in proof concerning IGR J11305-6256
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224. INTEGRAL/IBIS Extragalactic survey: 20-100 keV selected AGN
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Bassani, L., Molina, M., Malizia, A., Stephen, J. B., Bird, A. J., Bazzano, A., Belanger, G., Dean, A. J., De Rosa, A., Laurent, P., Lebrun, F., Ubertini, P., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Analysis of INTEGRAL Core Program and public Open Time observations performed up to April 2005 provides a sample of 62 active galactic nuclei in the 20-100 keV band above a flux limit of ~1.5x10^-11 erg/cm2/s. Most(42) of the sources in the sample are Seyfert galaxies, almost equally divided between type 1 and 2 objects, 6 are blazars and 14 are still unclassified. Excluding the blazars, the average redshift of our sample is 0.021 while the mean luminosity is Log(L) = 43.45. We find that absorption is present in 65% of the objects with 14% of the total sample due to Compton thick active galaxies. In agreement with both Swift/BAT team results and 2-10 keV studies, the fraction of absorbed objects decreases with the 20-100 keV luminosity. All Seyfert 2s in our sample are absorbed as are 33% of Seyfert 1s. The present data highlight the capability of INTEGRAL to probe the extragalactic gamma-ray sky and to find new and/or absorbed active galaxies., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. To be published in ApJ Letters
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225. INTEGRAL observation of the X-ray burster KS 1741-293
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De Cesare, G., Bazzano, A., Stratta, G., Del Santo, M., Tarana, A., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
KS 1741-293 was firstly detected in 1989 with the X-ray wide field camera TTM (3-10 keV) on board of the Rontgen-Kvant-Mir observatory. During these observations this source exhibited two X-ray bursts allowing to identify it as a neutron star in a Low mass X-ray Binary. During the BeppoSAX/WFC monitoring of the Galactic Centre Region, KS 1741-293 was also reported at a flux level of 6 mCrab in the 2-9 keV and 25 mCrab in the 9-25 keV energy range. Thanks to the deep and regular INTEGRAL observation of the Galactic Centre region, KS 1741-293 has been observed by the X-ray monitor JEM-X and the imager IBIS in a wide energy range, giving for the first time relevant information on its high energy behaviour. Furthermore, two X-ray bursts have been detected by JEM-X. We report on IBIS and JEM-X data analysis in terms of flux monitoring, spectral proprieties and bursts detection. The data reduction has been done with the most recent release of the standard analysis software (OSA 5.0)., Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 2005
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- 2005
226. INTEGRAL high energy behaviour of 4U 1812-12
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Tarana, A., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Cocchi, M., Gotz, D., Capitanio, F., Bird, A. J., and Fiocchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The low mass X-ray binary system 4U 1812-12 was monitored with the INTEGRAL observatory in the period 2003-2004 and with BeppoSAX on April 20, 2000. We report here on the spectral and temporal analysis of both persistent and burst emission. The full data set confirms the persistent nature of this burster, and reveals the presence of emission up to 200 keV. The persistent spectrum is well described by a comptonization (CompTT) model plus a soft blackbody component. The source was observed in a hard spectral state with a 1-200 keV luminosity of 2*10^(36) ergs/s and L/LEdd~1% and no meaningful flux variation has been revealed, as also confirmed by a 2004 RXTE observation. We have also detected 4 bursts showing double peaked profiles and blackbody spectra with temperatures ranging from 1.9 to 3.1 keV., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication by A&A
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227. X-ray and soft gamma-ray behaviour of the Galactic source 1E 1743.1-2843
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Del Santo, M., Sidoli, L., Bazzano, A., Cocchi, M., De Cesare, G., Paizis, A., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The X-ray persistent source 1E 1743.1-2843, located in the Galactic Centre region, has been detected by all X-ray telescope above 2 keV, whereas it is not visible in the soft X-rays (i. e. Rosat) because of the high column density along the line-of-sight. Moreover, the nature of this source remains still unknown. The gamma-ray satellite INTEGRAL has long observed the Galactic Centre region in the framework of the Core Programme. We report on results of two years of INTEGRAL observations of 1E 1743.1--2843 detected for the first time in the soft gamma-ray band. Since the source does not show any evidence for strong variability, we present the broad-band spectral analysis using not simultaneous XMM-Newton observations., Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 2005
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- 2005
228. Unveiling the nature of INTEGRAL objects through optical spectroscopy. II. The nature of four unidentified sources
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Masetti, N., Mason, E., Bassani, L., Bird, A. J., Maiorano, E., Malizia, A., Palazzi, E., Stephen, J. B., Bazzano, A., Dean, A. J., Ubertini, P., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of our optical spectrophotometric campaign ongoing at the Astronomical Observatory of Bologna in Loiano (Italy) on hard X-ray sources detected by INTEGRAL. We observed spectroscopically the putative optical counterparts of four more INTEGRAL sources, IGR J12391-1610, IGR J18406-0539, 2E 1853.7+1534 and IGR J19473+4452. These data have allowed us to determine their nature, finding that IGR J12391-1610 (=LEDA 170194) and IGR J19473+4452 are Seyfert 2 galaxies at redshifts z = 0.036 and z = 0.053, respectively, IGR J18406-0539 (=SS 406) is a Be massive X-ray binary located at about 1.1 kpc from Earth, and 2E 1853.7+1534 is a Type 1 Seyfert galaxy with z = 0.084. Physical parameters for these objects are also evaluated by collecting and discussing the available multiwavelength information. The determination of the extragalactic nature of a substantial fraction of sources inside the INTEGRAL surveys underlines the importance of hard X-ray observations for the study of background Active Galactic Nuclei located beyond the `Zone of Avoidance' of the Galactic Plane., Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication on A&A, main journal. The quality of Fig. 1 was degraded to fit the arXiv uploads size limits
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229. Is the INTEGRAL/IBIS source IGR J17204-3554 a gamma-ray emitting galaxy hidden behind the molecular cloud NGC 6334 ?
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Bassani, L., De Rosa, A., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Gehrels, N., Kennea, J. A., Malizia, A., Molina, M., Stephen, J. B., Ubertini, P., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the identification of a soft gamma-ray source, IGR J17204-3554, detected with the IBIS imager on board the INTEGRAL satellite. The source has a 20-100 keV flux of ~3x10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1 and is spatially coincident with NGC 6334, a molecular cloud located in the Sagittarius arm of the Milky Way. Diffuse X-ray emission has been reported from this region by ASCA and interpreted as coming from five far-infrared cores located in the cloud. However, the combined ASCA spectrum with a 9 keV temperature was difficult to explain in terms of emission from young pre-main sequence stars known to be embedded in the star forming regions. Detection of gamma-rays makes this interpretation even more unrealistic and suggests the presence of a high energy source in or behind the cloud. Follow up observations with Swift and archival Chandra data allow us to disentangle the NGC6334 enigma by locating an extragalactic object with the proper spectral characteristics to explain the gamma-ray emission. The combined Chandra/IBIS spectrum is well fitted by an absorbed power law with index 1.2+/-0.1, NH=1.4+/-0.1x10^23 cm^-2 and an unabsorbed 2-10 keV flux of 0.5x10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1. This column density is in excess of the galactic value implying that we are detecting a background galaxy concealed by the molecular cloud and further hidden by material located either in the galaxy itself or between IGR J17204-3554 and the cloud., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Astrophysical Journal Letters
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230. IGR J16393-4643: a new heavily-obscured X-ray pulsar
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Bodaghee, A., Walter, R., Heras, J. A. Zurita, Bird, A. J., Courvoisier, T. J. -L., Malizia, A., Terrier, R., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
An analysis of the high-energy emission from IGR J16393-4643 (=AX J1639.0-4642) is presented using data from INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton. The source is persistent in the 20-40 keV band at an average flux of 5.1x10^-11 ergs/cm2/s, with variations in intensity by at least an order of magnitude. A pulse period of 912.0+/-0.1 s was discovered in the ISGRI and EPIC light curves. The source spectrum is a strongly-absorbed (nH=(2.5+/-0.2)x10^23 atoms/cm2) power law that features a high-energy cutoff above 10 keV. Two iron emission lines at 6.4 and 7.1 keV, an iron absorption edge >7.1 keV, and a soft excess emission of 7x10^-15 ergs/cm2/s between 0.5-2 keV, are detected in the EPIC spectrum. The shape of the spectrum does not change with the pulse. Its persistence, pulsation, and spectrum place IGR J16393-4643 among the class of heavily-absorbed HMXBs. The improved position from EPIC is R.A. (J2000)=16:39:05.4 and Dec.=-46:42:12 (4" uncertainty) which is compatible with that of 2MASS J16390535-4642137., Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2005
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231. Using the ROSAT Catalogues to find counterparts for the second IBIS/ISGRI Survey Sources
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Stephen, J. B., Bassani, L., Malizia, A., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Lebrun, F., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The second IBIS/ISGRI survey has produced a catalogue containing 209 hard X-ray sources visible down to a flux limit of around 1 milliCrab. The point source location accuracy of typically 1-3 arcminutes has allowed the counterparts for most of these sources to be found at other wavelengths. In order to help identify the remaining objects, we have used the cross-correlation recently found between the ISGRI catalogue and the ROSAT All Sky Survey Bright Source Catalogue. In this way, for ISGRI sources which have a counterpart in soft X-rays, we can use the much smaller ROSAT error box to search for identifications. For this second survey, we find 114 associations with the number expected by chance to be ~2. Of these sources, 8 are in the list of unidentified objects and, using the smaller ROSAT error boxes, we can find tentative counterparts for five of them. We have performed the same analysis for the ROSAT Faint Source Catalogue, finding a further nine associations with ISGRI unidentified sources from a total of 29 correlations, and, notwithstanding the poorer location accuracy of these sources and higher chance coincidence possibility, we have managed to find a counterpart for another source. Finally, we have used the ROSAT HRI catalogue to search the ISGRI error boxes and find 5 more X-ray objects, of which two are neither in the bright or faint source catalogues, and for which we have managed to find optical/near infrared associations. This makes a total of 19 objects with X-ray counterparts for which we have found possible identifications for nine, most of which are extragalactic., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures and 2 tables. To be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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232. INTEGRAL observations of recurrent fast X-ray transient sources
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Sguera, V., Barlow, E. J., Bird, A. J., Clark, D. J., Dean, A. J., Hill, A. B., Moran, L., Shaw, S. E., Willis, D. R., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., and Malizia, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Fast X-ray Transients (FXTs) are believed to be non-recurrent bright X-ray sources lasting less than a day and occuring at serendipitous positions, they can best detected and discovered by instruments having a sufficiently wide field of view and high sensitivity. The IBIS/ISGRI instrument onboard INTEGRAL is particularly suited to detect new or already known fast X-ray transient sources. We report on IBIS/ISGRI detection of newly discovered outbursts of three fast transient sources located at low Galactic latitude: SAX J1818.6-1703; IGR J16479-4514; IGR J17391-302/XTE J1739-302. The reported results confirm and strengthen the very fast transient nature of these sources, given that all their newly detected outbursts have a duration less than about 3 hours. Additionally, they provide the first evidence for a possible recurrent fast transient behaviour as all three sources were detected in outburst by ISGRI more than once during the last 2 years., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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233. Two years of INTEGRAL monitoring of the Soft Gamma-Ray Repeater SGR 1806-20: from quiescence to frenzy
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Gotz, D., Mereghetti, S., Molkov, S., Hurley, K., Mirabel, I. F., Sunyaev, R., Weidenspointner, G., Brandt, S., Del Santo, M., Feroci, M., Gogus, E., von Kienlin, A., van der Klis, M., Kouveliotou, C., Lund, N., Pizzichini, G., Ubertini, P., Winkler, C., and Woods, P. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
SGR 1806-20 has been observed for more than 2 years with the INTEGRAL satellite. In this period the source went from a quiescent state into a very active one culminating in a giant flare on December 27 2004. Here we report on the properties of all the short bursts detected with INTEGRAL before the giant flare. We derive their number-intensity distribution and confirm the hardness-intensity correlation for the bursts found by Gotz et al. (2004a). Our sample includes a very bright outburst that occurred on October 5 2004, during which over one hundred bursts were emitted in 10 minutes, involving an energy release of 3 x 1E42 erg. We present a detailed analysis of it and discuss our results in the framework of the magnetar model., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, to appear in A&A main journal
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- 2005
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234. Global characteristics of the first IBIS/ISGRI catalogue sources: unveiling a murky episode of binary star evolution
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Dean, A. J., Bazzano, A., Hill, A. B., Stephen, J. B., Bassani, L., Barlow, E. J., Bird, A. J., Lebrun, F., Sguera, V., Shaw, S. E., Ubertini, P., Walter, R., and Willis, D. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
INTEGRAL is the first gamma-ray astronomy mission with a sufficient sensitivity and angular resolution combination appropriate to the detection and identification of considerable numbers of gamma-ray emitting sources. The large field of view enables INTEGRAL to survey the galactic plane on a regular (~weekly) basis as part of the core programme. The first source catalogue, based on the 1st year of core programme data has been completed and published (Bird et al., 2004). It contained 123 gamma-ray sources (24 HMXB, 54 LMXB, 28 ``unknown'', plus 17 others) - sufficient numbers for a reasonable statistical analysis of their global properties. The detection of previously unknown gamma-ray emitting sources generally exhibiting high intrinsic absorption, is intriguing. The substantial fraction of unclassified gamma-ray sources suggests they must constitute a significant family of objects. In this paper we review the global characteristics of the known galactic sources as well as the unclassified objects. We present Log(N)-Log(S) distributions, angular distributions, and for systems with reliable distance estimates the spatial distributions within the Galaxy and luminosity functions. For the unknown sources, this statistical analysis has shown that they are most likely to be HMXBs containing a highly magnetised neutron star. The lack of X-ray counterparts for these sources indicates a high degree of intrinsic obscuration., Comment: 11 pages, ll figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. The resolution of some figures has been degraded to minimise file sizes
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235. Chandra and RXTE spectroscopy of the accreting msec pulsar IGR J00291+5934
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Paizis, A., Nowak, M. A., Wilms, J., Courvoisier, T. J. -L., Ebisawa, K., Rodriguez, J., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on an observation of the recently discovered accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar IGR J00291+5934 performed with the RXTE-Proportional Counter Array (PCA) and Chandra-High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer (HETGS). The RXTE data are from a two week follow-up of the source while the Chandra observation took place around the end of the follow-up, about 12 days after the discovery of the source, when the source flux had decreased already by a factor of ten. The analysis of the Chandra data allowed us to extract the most precise X-ray position of IGR J00291+5934, RA=00 29 03.08 and Dec=+59 34 19.2 (0.6sec error), compatible with the optical and radio ones. We find that the spectra of IGR J00291+5934 can be described by a combination of a thermal component and a power-law. Along the outburst detected by PCA, the power-law photon index shows no particular trend while the thermal component (~1 keV, interpreted as a hot spot on the neutron star surface) becomes weaker until non-detection. In the simultaneous observation of the weak Chandra/RXTE spectrum, there is no more indication for the ~1 keV thermal component while we detect a colder thermal component (~0.4 keV) that we interpret as the emission from the cold disc. A hint for a 6.4 keV iron line is detected, together with an excess around 6.8 keV and absorption feature around 7.1 keV. The latter two features have never been detected in the spectra of accretion-driven millisecond pulsars before and, if confirmed, would suggest the presence of an expanding hot corona with high outflow velocities., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2005
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236. The INTEGRAL/IBIS source AXJ1838.0-0655: a soft X-ray to TeV gamma-ray broad band emitter
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Malizia, A., Bassani, L., Stephen, J. B., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Sguera, V., Renaud, M., Walter, R., and Gianotti, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on INTEGRAL observations of AX J1838.0-0655, one of the unidentified objects listed in the first IBIS/ISGRI survey catalogue and located in the Scutum arm region. This object, detected in the 20-300 keV band at a confidence level of 15.3 sigma (9 x 10^-11 erg cm-2 s-1) is the likely counterpart of the still unidentified TeV source HESS J1837-069. It has been detected in the past by various X-ray telescopes, including ASCA, implying that it is a persistent rather than a transient source; the ASCA image is compatible with the source not being resolved. The broad 1-300 keV spectrum is characterized by an absorbed (NH = 6.7+/-1.3 x 10^22 cm-2) and hard (Gamma =1.5 +/- 0.2) power law continuum. Possible counterparts (radio and infrared) present within the X-ray error box are discussed, even if no clear association can be identified. The broad band spectrum together with the TeV detection suggests that AX J1838.0-0655 maybe a supernova remnant or a pulsar wind nebula, which has so far eluded detection in the radio band. This is the second unidentified HESS source that shows a substantial soft gamma-ray emission., Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2005
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237. State transition and flaring activity of IGR J17464-3213/H1743-322 with SPI/INTEGRAL telescope
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Joinet, A., Jourdain, E., Malzac, J., Roques, J. P., Schoenfelder, V., Ubertini, P., and Capitanio, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
IGR J17464-3213, already known as the HEAO-1 transient source H1743-322, has been detected during a state transition by the SPI/INTEGRAL telescope. We describe the spectral evolution and flaring activity of IGR J17464-3213/H1743-322 from 2003 March 21 to 2003 April 22. During the first part, the source followed a continuous spectral softening, with the peak of the spectral energy distribution shifting from 100 keV down to a few keV. However the thermal disk and the hard X-ray components had a similar intensity, indicating that the source was in an intermediate state throughout our observations and evolving toward the soft state. In the second part of our observations, the ASM/RXTE and SPI/INTEGRAL light curve showed a strong flaring activity. Two flare events lasting about 1 day each have been detected with SPI and are probably due to instabilities in the accretion disk associated with the state transition. During these flares, the low (1.5-12 keV) and high (20-200 keV) energy fluxes monitored with ASM/RXTE and SPI/INTEGRAL, are correlated and the spectral shape (above 20 keV) remains unchanged while the luminosity increases by a factor greater than 2., Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
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- 2005
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238. INTEGRAL IGR J18135-1751=HESS J1813-178: A new cosmic high energy accelerator from keV to TeV
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Ubertini, P., Bassani, L., Malizia, A., Bazzano, A., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., De Rosa, A., Lebrun, F., Moran, L., Renaud, M., Stephen, J., Terrier, R., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a soft gamma ray source, namely IGR J18135-1751, detected with the IBIS imager on board the INTEGRAL satellite. The source is persistent and has a 20-100 keV luminosity of $\sim$5.7 $\times$ 10$^{34}$ erg s$^{-1}$ (assuming a distance of 4kpc). This source is coincident with one of the eight unidentified objects recently reported by the HESS collaboration as part of the first TeV survey of the inner part of the Galaxy. Two of these new sources found along the Galactic plane, HESS J1813-178 and HESS J1614-518, have no obvious lower energy counterpart, a fact that motivated the suggestion that they might be dark cosmic ray accelerators. HESS J1813-178 has a strongly absorbed X-ray counterpart, the ASCA source AGPS273.4-17.8, showing a power law spectrum with photon index $\sim$ 1.8 and a total (galactic plus intrinsic) absorption corresponding to N$_H$ $\sim$5 $\times$ 10$^{22}$ cm$^{-2}$. We hypothesize that the source is a pulsar wind nebula embedded in its supernova remnant. The lack of X/gamma-ray variability, the radio morphology and the ASCA spectrum are all compatible with this interpretation. In any case we rule out the hypothesis that HESS J1813-178 belongs to a new class of TeV objects or that it is a cosmic "dark particle" accelerator., Comment: Revised version accepted for publication in ApJ Letters; 12 pages, 3 Figures. Figure 1 printed in low resolution
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- 2005
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239. The 1 - 50 keV spectral and timing analysis of IGR J18027-2016: an eclipsing, high mass X-ray binary
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Hill, A. B., Walter, R., Knigge, C., Bazzano, A., Belanger, G., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Galache, J. L., Malizia, A., Renaud, M., Stephen, J., and Ubertini, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the association of the INTEGRAL source IGR J18027-2016 with the BeppoSAX source SAX J1802.7-2017. IGR J18027-2016 is seen to be a weak, persistent source by the IBIS/ISGRI instrument on board INTEGRAL with an average source count rate of 0.55 counts s^-1 (~6.1 mCrab) in the 20-40 keV band. Timing analysis performed on the ISGRI data identifies an orbital period of 4.5696 +/- 0.0009 days and gives an ephemeris of mid-eclipse as, T{mid} = 52931.37 +/- 0.04 MJD. Re-analysis of archival BeppoSAX data has provided a mass function for the donor star, f(m) = 16 +/- 1 M{sun} and a projected semimajor axis of a{x}sin{i} = 68 +/- 1 lt-s. We conclude that the donor is an OB-supergiant with a mass of 18.8-29.3 M{sun} and a radius of 15.0-23.4 R{sun}. Spectra obtained by XMM-Newton and ISGRI indicate a high hydrogen column density of NH = 6.8 x 10^22 cm^-2, which suggests intrinsic absorption. The source appears to be a high mass X-ray binary with the neutron star emitting X-rays through wind-fed accretion while in an eclipsing orbit around an OB-supergiant., Comment: Accepted for Publication in A&A. 9 pages, 10 figures. Figure 10 has been compressed, lowering the image quality
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240. Using the ROSAT Bright Source Catalogue to find Counterparts for IBIS/ISGRI Survey Sources
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Stephen, J. B., Bassani, L., Molina, M., Malizia, A., Bazzano, A., Ubertini, P., Dean, A. J., Bird, A. J., Much, R., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The IBIS/ISGRI first year galactic plane survey has produced a catalogue containing 123 hard X-ray sources visible down to a flux limit of a few milliCrabs. The point source location accuracy of typically 1-3 arcminutes has allowed the counterparts for 95 of these sources to be found at other wavelengths. In order to identify the remaining 28 objects, we have cross-correlated the ISGRI catalogue with the ROSAT All Sky Survey Bright Source Catalogue. In this way, for ISGRI sources which have a counterpart in soft X-rays, we can use the, much smaller, ROSAT error box to search for identifications. As expected, we find a strong correlation between the two catalogues and calculate that there are 75 associations with the number expected by chance to be almost zero. Of these 75 sources, ten are in the list of unidentified objects. Using the ROSAT error boxes we provide tentative associations for 8 of these., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in A&A Letters
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- 2005
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241. Discovery of the INTEGRAL X/Gamma-ray transient IGR J00291+5934: a Comptonised accreting ms pulsar ?
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Shaw, S. E., Mowlavi, N., Rodriguez, J., Ubertini, P., Capitanio, F., Ebisawa, K., Eckert, D., Courvoisier, T. J. -L., Produit, N., Walter, R., and Falanga, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a high-energy transient with the IBIS/ISGRI detector on board the INTEGRAL observatory. The source, namely IGR J00291+5934, was first detected on 2nd December 2004 in the routine monitoring of the IBIS/ISGRI 20--60 keV images. The observations were conducted during Galactic Plane Scans, which are a key part of the INTEGRAL Core Programme observations. After verifying the basic source behaviour, the discovery was announced on 3rd December. The transient shows a hard Comptonised spectrum, with peak energy release at about 20 keV and a total luminosity of ~ 0.9E36 erg/s in the 5--100 keV range, assuming a distance of 3 kpc. Following the INTEGRAL announcement of the discovery of IGR J00291+5934, a number of observations were made by other instruments. We summarise the results of those observations and, together with the INTEGRAL data, identifiy IGR J00291+5934 as the 6th member of a class of accreting X-ray millisecond pulsars., Comment: Accepted for publication as an A&A Letter 24/01/2005. 5 pages, 2 figures
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- 2005
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242. INTEGRAL/IBIS search for e-e+ annihilation radiation from the Galactic Center Region
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De Cesare, G., Bazzano, A., Capitanio, F., Del Santo, M., Lonjou, V., Natalucci, L., Ubertini, P., and Von Ballmoos, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Electron-positron annihilation radiation from the Galactic Center region has been detected since the seventies, but its astrophysical origin is still a topic of a scientific debate. We have analyzed data of the gamma-ray imager IBIS/ISGRI onboard of ESA's INTEGRAL platform in the e$^{-}$e$^{+}$ line. During the first year of the missions Galactic Center Deep Exposure no evidence for point sources at 511 keV has been found in the ISGRI data; the $2 \sigma$ upper limit for resolved single point sources is estimated to be $1.6\times 10^{-4} ph cm^{-2} s^{-1}$., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; Cospar 2004. To be published in: Advances in Space Research
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- 2005
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243. Structural assessment of bridges through ambient noise deconvolution interferometry: application to the lateral dynamic behaviour of a RC multi-span viaduct
- Author
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García-Macías, Enrique and Ubertini, Filippo
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- 2021
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244. A high-performance electric field detector for space missions
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Badoni, D., Ammendola, R., Bertello, I., Cipollone, P., Conti, L., De Santis, C., Diego, P., Masciantonio, G., Picozza, P., Sparvoli, R., Ubertini, P., and Vannaroni, G.
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- 2018
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245. GRB 040403: a faint X-ray rich Gamma-ray Burst discovered by INTEGRAL
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Mereghetti, S., Gotz, D., Andersen, M. I., Castro-Tirado, A., Frontera, F., Gorosabel, J., Hartmann, D. H., Hjorth, J., Hudec, R., Hurley, K., Pizzichini, G., Produit, N., Tarana, A., Topinka, M., Ubertini, P., and de Ugarte, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
GRB 040403 is one of the faintest gamma-ray bursts for which a rapid and accurate localization has been obtained. Here we report on the gamma-ray properties of this burst, based on observations with the IBIS instrument aboard INTEGRAL, and the results of searches for its optical afterglow. The steep spectrum (power law photon index = 1.9 in the 20-200 keV range) implies that GRB 040403 is most likely an X-ray rich burst. Our optical limit of R > 24.2 at 16.5 hours after the burst, indicates a rather faint afterglow, similar to those seen in other relatively soft and faint bursts., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters
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- 2004
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246. 3-200 keV spectral states and variability of the INTEGRAL Black Hole binary IGR J17464-3213
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Capitanio, F., Ubertini, P., Bazzano, A., Kretschmar, P., Zdziarski, A. A., Joinet, A., Barlow, E. J., Bird, A. J., Dean, A. J., Jourdain, E., De Cesare, G., Del Santo, M., Natalucci, L., Bel, M. Cadolle, and Goldwurm, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
On March 2003, IBIS, the gamma-ray imager on board the INTEGRAL satellite, detected an outburst from a new source, IGR J17464-3213, that turned out to be a HEAO-1 transient, H1743-322. In this paper we report on the high energy behaviour of this BHC studied with the three main instruments onboard INTEGRAL. The data, collected with unprecedented sensitivity in the hard X-Ray range, show a quite hard Comptonised emission from 3 keV up to 150 keV during the rising part of the source outburst, with no thermal emission detectable. A few days later, a prominent soft disk multicolour component appears, with the hard tail luminosity almost unchanged: 10-9 erg*cm-2*s-1. Two months later, during a second monitoring campaign near the end of the outburst, the observed disk component was unchanged. Conversely, the Comptonised emission from the central-hot part of the disk reduced by a factor of 10. We present here its long term behaviour in different energy ranges and the combined JEM-X, SPI and IBIS wide band spectral evolution of this source., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for pubblication in APJ
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- 2004
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247. 1E 1740.7-2942: temporal and spectral evolution from INTEGRAL and RXTE observations
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Del Santo, M., Bazzano, A., Zdziarski, A. A., Smith, D. M., Bezayiff, N., Farinelli, R., De Cesare, G., Ubertini, P., Bird, A. J., Cadolle-Bel, M., Capitanio, F., Goldwurm, A., Malizia, A., Mirabel, I. F., Natalucci, L., and Winkler, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of the monitoring of the black hole candidate 1E 1740.7-2942 with INTEGRAL, in combination with simultaneous observations by RXTE. We concentrate on broad-band spectra from INTEGRAL/IBIS and RXTE/PCA instruments. During our observations, the source spent most of its time in the canonical low/hard state with the measured flux variation within a factor of two. In 2003 September the flux started to decline and in 2004 February it was below the sensitivity level of the INTEGRAL and RXTE instruments. Notably, during the decline phase the spectrum changed, becoming soft and typical of black hole binaries in the intermediate/soft state., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A; typos corrected in the abstract
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- 2004
- Full Text
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248. A discontinuous Galerkin method for strain gradient-dependent damage: Study of interpolations, convergence and two dimensional problems
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Molari, L., Wells, G. N., Garikipati, K., and Ubertini, F.
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Physics - Computational Physics ,Physics - General Physics - Abstract
A discontinuous Galerkin method has been developed for strain gradient-dependent damage. The strength of this method lies in the fact that it allows the use of $C^0$ interpolation functions for continuum theories involving higher-order derivatives, while in a conventional framework at least $C^1$ interpolations are required. The discontinuous Galerkin formulation thereby offers significant potential for engineering computations with strain gradient-dependent models. When using basis functions with a low degree of continuity, jump conditions arise at element edges which are incorporated in the weak form. In addition to the formulation itself, a detailed study of the convergence properties of the method for various element types is presented, an error analysis is undertaken, and the method is also shown to work in two dimensions., Comment: LaTeX2e, 16 figures
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- 2004
249. Spectral states and transient behaviour of a sample of X-ray bursters observed by BeppoSax
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Natalucci, L., Bazzano, A., Capitanio, F., Cocchi, M., Ubertini, P., and Zand, J. J. M. in 't
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Astrophysics - Abstract
During observation campaigns of the Galactic Bulge region, BeppoSAX detected a total of 21 new X-ray bursters in about 6 years of operation. These sources are mostly transient and often feature a hard X-ray spectrum, extending up to ~ 200 keV. A hard spectrum is generally found in weak, relatively short outbursts. On the other hand two sources, SAX J1747.0-2853 and SAX J1750.8-2900, have been seen with soft X-ray transient behaviour. In both low/hard and high/soft state, a thermal component is observed at energies below \~10 keV and the spectra are compatible with the same model consisting of a blackbody or disk blackbody plus a hard or Comptonized component. Light curves are characterized by either weak, short flares or longer, high luminosity eruptions with exponential decay., Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Proceedings of the 5th INTEGRAL Workshop 'The INTEGRAL Universe', Munich, 16-20 February 2004. Accepted for publication in ESA SP-552
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- 2004
250. INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton and Rossi-XTE Observations of the State Transition of the X-ray Transient and Black Hole Candidate XTE J1720-318
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Bel, Marion Cadolle, Goldwurm, Andrea, Rodriguez, Jerome, Goldoni, Paolo, Corbel, Stephane, Sizun, Patrick, Parmar, Arvind, Kuulkers, Eric, Capitanio, Fiamma, Del Santo, Melania, Tarana, Antonella, Ubertini, Pietro, Roques, Jean-Pierre, Bouchet, Laurent, Farinelli, Ruben, Frontera, Filippo, and Westergaard, Niels
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the results of extensive high-energy observations of the X-ray transient and black hole candidate XTE J1720-318 performed with INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton and RXTE. The source, which underwent an outburst in January 2003, was observed in February in a spectral state dominated by a soft component with a weak high-energy tail. The XMM-Newton data provided a high column density Nh of 1.2*e22 cm^{-2} which suggests that the source lies at the Galactic Center distance. The simultaneous RXTE and INTEGRAL Target of Opportunity observations allowed us to measure the weak and steep tail, typical of a black-hole binary in the so-called High/Soft State. We could follow the evolution of the source outburst over several months using the INTEGRAL Galactic Center survey observations. The source regained activity at the end of March: it showed a clear transition towards a much harder state, and then decayed to a quiescent state in summer. In the hard state, the source was detected up to 200 keV with a typical power law index of 1.8 and a peak luminosity of 7.5*e36 ergs s^{-1} in the 2-100 keV band, for an assumed distance of 8 kpc. We conclude that XTE J1720-318 is indeed representative of the class of the black hole X-ray novae which populate our Galactic bulge and we discuss its properties in the frame of the spectral models used for transient black hole binaries., Comment: avril 2004
- Published
- 2004
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