ASCA Measurements of the Grain-scattered X-Ray Halos of Eclipsing Massive X-Ray Binaries: VELA X-1 and Centaurus X-3
Abstract
We have measured the decaying dust-scattered X-ray halo of Cen X-3 during its binary eclipse with the ASCA solid-state imaging spectrometer (SIS). The surface brightness profile (SBP) of the image in the low-energy band (0.5-3 keV) lies substantially above the point-spread function (PSF) of the X-ray telescope, while the SBP in the high-energy band (5-10 keV) exhibits no significant deviation. By contrast, the SBPs of Vela X-1 during its eclipse are consistent with the PSF in both the low- and high-energy bands -- strong evidence that a dust halo is indeed present in Cen X-3. Accordingly, we modeled the SBP of Cen X-3 taken from six consecutive time segments under the principal assumptions that the dust is distributed uniformly along a segment of the line of sight, the grains have a power-law size distribution, and the low-energy source flux was the same function of orbital phase before as during our observation. The best-fit set of parameters included a grain density value of 1.3 g/cu cm, substanially less than the density of 'astronomical silicate.' This result supports the idea that interstellar grains are 'fluffy' aggregates of smaller solid particles. We attribute the failure to detect a halo of Vela X-1 during its eclipse phase to extended strong circumsource absorption that probably occurred before the eclipse and allowed the halo to decay away before the observation began.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- November 1994
- DOI:
- 10.1086/187620
- Bibcode:
- 1994ApJ...436L...5W
- Keywords:
-
- Eclipsing Binary Stars;
- Halos;
- Massive Stars;
- Pulsars;
- X Ray Binaries;
- X Ray Scattering;
- Imaging Spectrometers;
- Interstellar Matter;
- Light Curve;
- Astrophysics;
- STARS: BINARIES: ECLIPSING;
- ISM: DUST;
- EXTINCTION;
- STARS: PULSARS: INDIVIDUAL NAME: VELA X-1;
- STARS: PULSARS: INDIVIDUAL NAME: CENTAURUS X-3;
- X-RAYS: STARS