Top Banner
2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb Stéphanie Dupuy
12

2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb Stéphanie Dupuy

Jan 14, 2016

Download

Documents

Jesús

2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb Stéphanie Dupuy. Why search for X-ray emitting neutron stars?. Almost 2000 known neutron stars (NS) (1627 pulsars, ~70 NS X-ray binaries , the magnificent seven …) Expect a NS to be born every 30-100 yrs in Milky Way - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars

Natalie Webb Stéphanie Dupuy

Page 2: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

Why search for X-ray emitting neutron stars?

• Almost 2000 known neutron stars (NS) (1627 pulsars, ~70 NS X-ray binaries, the magnificent seven …)• Expect a NS to be born every 30-100 yrs in Milky Way • => 108-109 NS in our Galaxy (Neuhäuser & Trümper 1999) – depends on star formation• Only youngest detected as radio pulsars• Expect ~1000 radio quiet NSs for every pulsar (Kulkarni & van Kerkwijk 1998)• 7 X-ray emitting radio quiet NSs found with Rosat

NS detection important for: star formation rate physics of dense matter stellar core collapse

Page 3: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

From Rosat to XMM-Newton

XMM-Newton has >10x collecting area to detect 100 cts from a NS, Lx = 1 x 1031 erg s-1, 1.9 kpc Rosat ~ 30 ks XMM-Newton ~ 3 ks

Dramatic increase of observable population!

Median flux of 2XMMp sources is ~10x fainter than the Rosat All Sky Survey limit=> Huge resource with which to detect NSs

Page 4: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

X-ray emitting, dim, isolated neutron stars (XDINs)

(Zane et al. 2005)

Radio quietX-ray to optical flux ratio (104) Low hydrogen column densities (nH

~1020 cm-2)

Page 5: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

Quiescent neutron star low mass X-ray binaries (qNSLMXBs)

Without assuming mass MNS = 1.190.21

0.69 Msolar

T = 1.130.470.25 x106K

R = 7.55.10.60 km

2 = 1.12, 45 d.o.f.

Adapted from Gendre, Barret & Webb (2003a)

Page 6: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

2XMMp (and all preceding versions) Used temperatures and nH of XDINs and qNSLMXBsDetermined ranges of fluxes in 2XMMp bands using:• xspec blackbody model • neutron star atmosphere model (Zavlin et al. 1996) colour diagrams ratios fluxes

screening important

Check: Found all observed XDINs/qNSLMXBs observed in 2XMMp

Page 7: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

Results

346 candidate NSs based on X-ray properties98 candidates without optical counterparts 55% false sources => 44 NS candidatesProposed 3 candidates to be observed in AO6/VLT

Page 8: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

A strange object …

0.2-0.5 keV: 1.730.87 x 10-16 erg cm-2 s-1

0.5-1.0 keV : 1.490.02 x 10-13 erg cm-2 s-1

1.0-2.0 keV : 5.190.16 x 10-14 erg cm-2 s-1

2.0-4.5 keV : 3.370.26 x 10-16 erg cm-2 s-1

4.5-12.0 keV : 0.421.13 x 10-16 erg cm-2 s-1

No optical counterpart

Page 9: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

kT1=0.0390.002 keVkT2=0.1680.002 keV

2=2.17 (111 dof)

All looking good ?

Flux ~ 7x10-13 erg cm-2 s-1

Page 10: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

kT1=0.0390.003 keVkT2=0.1950.050 keV

2=7.8 (103 dof)

… but

Flux ~ 5x10-12 erg cm-2 s-1

Page 11: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

kT1=0.080.05 keVkT2=0.440.02 keVkT3=1.310.03 keV

2=4.54 (215 dof)

… and

Rosat (early ’90s)

Flux ~ 1.5x10-12

erg cm-2 s-1

Page 12: 2XMMp and Galactic neutron stars Natalie Webb  Stéphanie Dupuy

… and in fact …

The bright star is the optical counterpart (M2 V)B=9, V=7.5, proper motion=4.8’’/yr, d=2.5 pc!!!

Although,

The temperatures seem to be low for a flare star

But no significant radial velocity (N’dever et al 2002)

Summary

43 candidate neutron starsHoping for three to be followed up with XMM/VLTOne very strange object!