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  4. Swift-BAT Hard X-Ray Sky Monitoring Unveils the Orbital Period of the HMXB IGR J18219-1347
 
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Swift-BAT Hard X-Ray Sky Monitoring Unveils the Orbital Period of the HMXB IGR J18219-1347

Author(s)
La Parola, V.
Cusumano, G.
Segreto, A.
D'Elia, Valerio  
Subjects

X-rays binaries

X-rays individual IGR...

Date Issued
2013-09-01
Mission(s)
Swift  
Abstract
IGR J18219-1347 is a hard X-ray source discovered by INTEGRAL in 2010. We have analyzed the X-ray emission of this source exploiting the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) survey data up to 2012 March and the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) data that include also an observing campaign performed in early 2012. The source is detected at a significance level of ~13 standard deviations in the 88 month BAT survey data, and shows a strong variability along the survey monitoring, going from high intensity to quiescent states. A timing analysis on the BAT data revealed an intensity modulation with a period of P <SUB>0</SUB> = 72.44 0.3 days. The significance of this modulation is about seven standard deviations in Gaussian statistics. We interpret it as the orbital period of the binary system. The light curve folded at P <SUB>0</SUB> shows a sharp peak covering ~30% of the period, superimposed to a flat level roughly consistent with zero. In the soft X-rays the source is detected only in 5 out of 12 XRT observations, with the highest recorded count rate corresponding to a phase close to the BAT folded light-curve peak. The long orbital period and the evidence that the source emits only during a small fraction of the orbit suggests that the IGR J18219-1347 binary system hosts a Be star. The broadband XRT+BAT spectrum is well modeled with a flat absorbed power law with a high-energy exponential cutoff at ~11 keV.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/3121
DOI
10.1088/2041-8205/775/1/L24
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2013ApJ...775L..24L
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