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Showing 1–4 of 4 results
Advanced filters: Author: Valery Suleimanov Clear advanced filters
  • X-ray polarimetry observations with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer constrain the accretion geometry in an X-ray pulsar and provide evidence for a misalignment of the spin, magnetic and orbital axes in Her X-1.

    • Victor Doroshenko
    • Juri Poutanen
    • Fei Xie
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 6, P: 1433-1443
  • Using Gaia and XMM-Newton to constrain the distance to and properties of the central compact object of a supernova remnant, an extremely light (\(0.7{7}_{-0.17}^{+0.20}\) solar masses) neutron star has been found. This mass is twice as light as normally found for these kinds of object, and places limits on the allowed equations of state of neutron star matter.

    • Victor Doroshenko
    • Valery Suleimanov
    • Andrea Santangelo
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 6, P: 1444-1451
  • Novae are caused by runaway thermonuclear burning in the hydrogen-rich envelopes of accreting white dwarfs, which leads to a rapid expansion of the envelope and the ejection of most of its mass1,2. Theory has predicted the existence of a ‘fireball’ phase following directly on from the runaway fusion, which should be observable as a short, bright and soft X-ray flash before the nova becomes visible in the optical35. Here we report observations of a bright and soft X-ray flash associated with the classical Galactic nova YZ Reticuli 11 h before its 9 mag optical brightening. No X-ray source was detected 4 h before and after the event, constraining the duration of the flash to shorter than 8 h. In agreement with theoretical predictions4,68, the source’s spectral shape is consistent with a black-body of 3.27+0.11−0.33 × 105 K (28.2+0.9−2.8 eV), or a white dwarf atmosphere, radiating at the Eddington luminosity, with a photosphere that is only slightly larger than a typical white dwarf.

    • Ole König
    • Jörn Wilms
    • Klaus Werner
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 605, P: 248-250