The direct cooling tail method for X-ray burst analysis to constrain neutron star masses and radii.




Valery F. Suleimanov, Juri Poutanen, Joonas Nättilä, Jari J.E. Kajava, Mikhail G. Revnivtsev, Klaus Werner

PublisherOXFORD UNIV PRESS

2017

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

MNRAS

466

1

906

913

8

0035-8711

1365-2966

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw3132

https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/mnras/stw3132

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/18212290



Determining neutron star (NS) radii and masses can help to understand the properties of matter at supra-nuclear densities. Thermal emission during thermonuclear X-ray bursts from NSs in low-mass X-ray binaries provides a unique opportunity to study NS parameters, because of the high fluxes, large luminosity variations and the related changes in the spectral properties. The standard cooling tail method uses hot NS atmosphere models to convert the observed spectral evolution during cooling stages of X-ray bursts to the Eddington flux F_Edd and the stellar angular size Omega. These are then translated to the constraints on the NS mass M and radius R. Here we present the improved, direct cooling tail method that generalises the standard approach. First, we adjust the cooling tail method to account for the bolometric correction to the flux. Then, we fit the observed dependence of the blackbody normalization on flux with a theoretical model directly on the M-R plane by interpolating theoretical dependences to a given gravity, hence ensuring only weakly informative priors for M and R instead of F_Edd and Omega. 
The direct cooling method is demonstrated using a photospheric radius expansion burst from SAX J1810.8--2609, which has happened when the system was in the hard state. Comparing to the standard cooling tail method, the confidence regions are shifted by 1 sigma towards larger radii, giving R=11.5-13.0 km at M=1.3-1.8 M_sun for this NS.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:31