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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "McBride, V A"

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    Accurate classification of 29 objects detected in the 39 month Palermo Swift /BAT hard X-ray catalogue
    (2012) Parisi, P; Masetti, N; Jiménez-Bailón, E; Chavushyan, V; Palazzi, E; Landi, R; Malizia, A; Bassani, L; Bazzano, A; Bird, A J; Charles, P A; Galaz, G; Mason, E; McBride, V A; Minniti, D; Morelli, L; Schiavone, F; Ubertini, P
    Through an optical campaign performed at 4 telescopes located in the northern and the southern hemispheres, plus archival data from two on-line sky surveys, we have obtained optical spectroscopy for 29 counterparts of unclassified or poorly studied hard X-ray emitting objects detected with Swift/BAT and listed in the 39 months Palermo catalogue. All these objects have also observations taken with Swift/XRT or XMM-EPIC which not only allow us to pinpoint their optical counterpart, but also to study their X-ray spectral properties (column density, power law photon index and F2-10 keV flux). We find that 28 sources in our sample are AGN; 7 are classified as type 1 while 21 are of type 2; the remaining object is a galactic cataclysmic variable. Among our type 1 AGN, we find 5 objects of intermediate Seyfert type (1.2-1.9) and one Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy; for 4 out of 7 sources, we have been able to estimate the central black hole mass. Three of the type 2 AGN of our sample display optical features typical of the LINER class and one is a likely Compton thick AGN. All galaxies classified in this work are relatively nearby objects since their redshifts lie in the range 0.008-0.075; the only galactic object found lies at an estimated distance of 90 pc. We have also investigated the optical versus X-ray emission ratio of the galaxies of our sample to test the AGN unified model. For them, we have also compared the X-ray absorption (due to gas) with the optical reddening (due to dust): we find that for most of our sources, specifically those of type 1.9-2.0 the former is higher than the latter confirming early results by Maiolino et al. (2001); this is possibly due to the properties of dust in the circumnuclear obscuring torus of the AGN.
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    Exploring inside-out Doppler tomography: magnetic cataclysmic variables
    (2016) Kotze, E J; Potter, S B; McBride, V A
    Context. Doppler tomography of magnetic cataclysmic variables is a valuable tool for the interpretation of the complex spectroscopic emission line profiles observed for these systems.
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    Exploring inside-out Doppler tomography: non-magnetic cataclysmic variables
    (2015) Kotze, E J; Potter, S B; McBride, V A
    Context. Doppler tomography is a technique that has revolutionised the interpretation of the phase-resolved spectroscopic observations of interacting binary systems.
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    The 2016 super-Eddington outburst of SMC X-3: X-ray and optical properties and system parameters
    (2017) Townsend, L J; McBride, V A; Buckley, D A H; Evans, P A; Udalski, A
    On 2016 July 30 (MJD 57599), observations of the Small Magellanic Cloud by Swift/XRT found an increase in X-ray counts coming from a position consistent with the Be/X-ray binary pulsar SMC X-3. Follow-up observations on 2016 August 3 (MJD 57603) and 2016 August 10 (MJD 57610) revealed a rapidly increasing count rate and confirmed the onset of a new X-ray outburst from the system. Further monitoring by Swift began to uncover the enormity of the outburst, which peaked at 1.2 x 1039 erg/s on 2016 August 25 (MJD 57625). The system then began a gradual decline in flux that was still continuing over 5 months after the initial detection. We explore the X-ray and optical behaviour of SMC X-3 between 2016 July 30 and 2016 December 18 during this super-Eddington outburst. We apply a binary model to the spin-period evolution that takes into account the complex accretion changes over the outburst, to solve for the orbital parameters. Our results show SMC X-3 to be a system with a moderately low eccentricity amongst the Be/X-ray binary systems and to have a dynamically determined orbital period statistically consistent with the prominent period measured in the OGLE optical light curve. Our optical and X-ray derived ephemerides show that the peak in optical flux occurs roughly 6 days after periastron. The measured increase in I-band flux from the counterpart during the outburst is reflected in the measured equivalent width of the H-alpha line emission, though the H-alpha emission itself seems variable on sub-day time-scales, possibly due to the NS interacting with an inhomogeneous disc.
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    The nature of 50 Palermo Swift -BAT hard X-ray objects through optical spectroscopy
    (2017) Rojas, A F; Masetti, N; Minniti, D; Jiménez-Bailón, E; Chavushyan, V; Hau, G; McBride, V A; Bassani, L; Bazzano, A; Bird, A J; Galaz, G; Gavignaud, I; Landi, R; Malizia, A; Morelli, L; Palazzi, E; Patiño-Álvarez, V; Stephen, J B; Ubertini, P
    We present the nature of 50 hard X-ray emitting objects unveiled through an optical spectroscopy campaign performed at seven telescopes in the northern and southern hemispheres. These objects were detected with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) instrument onboard the Swift satellite and listed as of unidentified nature in the 54-month Palermo BAT catalogue. In detail, 45 sources in our sample are identified as active galactic nuclei of which, 27 are classified as type 1 (with broad and narrow emission lines) and 18 are classified as type 2 (with only narrow emission lines). Among the broad-line emission objects, one is a type 1 high-redshift quasi-stellar object, and among the narrow-line emission objects, one is a starburst galaxy, one is a X-ray bright optically normal galaxy, and one is a low ionization nuclear emission line region. We report 30 new redshift measurements, 13 confirmations and 2 more accurate redshift values. The remaining five objects are galactic sources: three are Cataclismic Variables, one is a X-ray Binary probably with a low mass secondary star, and one is an active star.
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    X-ray pulsations from the region of the supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR J17544−2619
    (2012) Drave, S P; Bird, A J; Townsend, L J; Hill, A B; McBride, V A; Sguera, V; Bazzano, A; Clark, D J
    Phase-targeted RXTE observations have allowed us to detect a transient 71.49 pm 0.02 s signal that is most likely to be originating from the supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR J17544-2619. The phase-folded light curve shows a possible double-peaked structure with a pulsed flux of ~4.8*10-12 erg cm-2 s-1 (3-10 keV). Assuming the signal to indicate the spin period of the neutron star in the system, the provisional location of IGR J17544-2619 on the Corbet diagram places the system within the classical wind-fed supergiant XRB region. Such a result illustrates the growing trend of supergiant fast X-ray transients to span across both of the original classes of HMXB in Porb - Pspin space.
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