6533b85dfe1ef96bd12bf23e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evidence for a resonant cyclotron line in IGR J16493-4348 from the Swift-BAT hard X-ray survey

V. La ParolaR. IariaN. R. RobbaA. SegretoAntonino D'aiT. Di SalvoGiancarlo Cusumano

subject

High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)PhysicsAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaCyclotronFOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsAstrophysicsSpectral lineMagnetic fieldlaw.inventionNeutron starSettore FIS/05 - Astronomia E AstrofisicaSpace and Planetary SciencelawX-ray astrophysicsAstrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)Energy (signal processing)Line (formation)Gravitational redshift

description

Resonant absorption cyclotron features are a key diagnostic tool to directly measure the strength of the magnetic field of accreting neutron stars. However, typical values for cyclotron features lie in the high-energy part of the spectrum between 20 keV and 50 keV, where detection is often damped by the low statistics from single pointed observations. We show that long-term monitoring campaign performed with Swift-BAT of persistently, but faint, accreting high-mass X-ray binaries is able to reveal in their spectra the presence of cyclotron features. We extracted the average Swift-BAT 15-150 keV spectrum from the 54 months long Swift-BAT survey of the high-mass X-ray source IGR J16493-4348. To constrain the broadband spectrum we used soft X-ray spectra from Swift-XRT and Suzaku pointed observations. We model the spectra using a set of phenomenological models usually adopted to describe the energy spectrum of accreting high-mass X-ray binaries; irrespective of the models we used, we found significant improvements in the spectral fits adding to the models a broad (10 keV width) absorption feature, with best-fitting energy estimate between 30 and 33 keV, that we interpret as evidence for a resonant cyclotron absorption feature. We also discuss instrumental issues related to the use of Swift-BAT for this kind of studies and the statistical method to weight the confidence level of this detection. Correcting for the gravitational redshift of a 1.4 M$_{\sun}$ neutron star, the inferred surface magnetic field is Bsurf 3.7 x 10^{12} Gauss. The spectral parameters of IGR J16493-4348 fit well with empirical correlations observed when the whole sample of high-mass binaries with detected cyclotron features is considered.

10.1051/0004-6361/201117035http://hdl.handle.net/10447/57876