What ignites on the neutron star of 4U 0614+091?
E. Kuulkers (1), J.J.M. in 't Zand (2), J.-L. Atteia (3), A.M. Levine, (4), S. Brandt, (5), D.A. Smith (6), M. Linares (7), M. Falanga (8), C., Sanchez-Fernandez (1), C.B. Markwardt (9), T.E. Strohmayer (10), A. Cumming, (11), M. Suzuki (12) ((1) ESA/ESAC, Spain, (2) SRON

TL;DR
This study analyzes diverse X-ray bursts from the neutron star in 4U 0614+091, revealing varied burst characteristics, a short superburst quench time, and implications for the accreted material's composition and system nature.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive observational analysis of burst diversity, superburst behavior, and constraints on accreted material composition in 4U 0614+091.
Findings
Detected a superburst candidate with a short 19-day quench time.
Observed a wide range of burst durations from 10 seconds to several hours.
Suggested the presence of helium in accreted material, challenging previous assumptions.
Abstract
[abridged] The LMXB 4U 0614+091 is a source of sporadic thermonuclear (type I) X-ray bursts. We find bursts with a wide variety of characteristics in serendipitous wide-field X-ray observations by EURECA/WATCH, RXTE/ASM, BeppoSAX/WFC, HETE-2/FREGATE, INTEGRAL/IBIS/ISGRI, and Swift/BAT, as well as pointed observations by RXTE/PCA and HEXTE. Most of them reach a peak flux of ~15 Crab, but a few only reach a peak flux below a Crab. One of the bursts shows a very strong photospheric radius-expansion phase. This allows us to evaluate the distance to the source: 3.2 kpc. The burst durations are between 10 sec to 5 min. However, after one of the intermediate-duration bursts, a faint tail is seen to at least ~2.4 hours after the start of the burst. One very long burst lasted for several hours. This superburst candidate was followed by a normal type-I burst only 19 days later. This is, to our…
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