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Published April 20, 2001 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Quiescent X-Ray Spectrum of the Neutron Star in Centaurus X-4 Observed with Chandra/ACIS-S

Abstract

We report on spectral and intensity variability analysis from a Chandra/ACIS-S observation of the transient, type I X-ray bursting low-mass X-ray binary Cen X-4. The quiescent X-ray spectrum during this observation is statistically identical to one observed previously with BeppoSAX and close, but not identical, to one observed previously with ASCA. The X-ray spectrum is best described as a pure hydrogen atmosphere thermal spectrum plus a power-law component that dominates the spectrum above 2 keV. The best-fit radius of the neutron star is r = 12.9 ± 2.6 (d/1.2 kpc) km if the interstellar absorption is fixed at the value implied by the optical reddening. Allowing the interstellar absorption to be a free parameter yields r = 19 ^(+45)_(-10) (d/1.2 kpc) km (90% confidence). The thermal spectrum from the neutron star surface is inconsistent with a solar metallicity. We find a 3 σ upper limit of rms variability ≤18% (0.2-2.0 keV; 0.0001-1 Hz) during the observation. On the other hand, the 0.5-10.0 keV luminosity decreased by 40 ± 8% in the 4.9 yr between the ASCA and Chandra observations. This variability can be attributed to the power-law component. Moreover, we limit the variation in thermal temperature to ≾10% over these 4.9 yr. The stability of the thermal temperature and emission-area radius supports the interpretation that the quiescent thermal emission is caused by the hot neutron star core.

Additional Information

© 2001 American Astronomical Society. Received 2000 December 5; accepted 2000 December 18. The authors are grateful to the Chandra X-Ray Observatory team for producing this exquisite observatory. R. R. thanks Andy Fabian for a useful conversation regarding historical measurements of photospheric absorption lines. The authors thank Dany Page and Andrew Cumming for comments on the text prior to submission. This research was partially supported by the National Science Foundation under grant PHY99-07949 and by NASA through grant NAG 5-8658, NAG 5-7017, and the Chandra Guest Observer program through grant NAS 8-39073. L. B. is a Cottrell Scholar of the Research Corporation. E. F. B. acknowledges support from an Enrico Fermi Fellowship.

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