The Unusual X-ray Binaries of the Globular Cluster NGC 6652
G. Coomber, C. O. Heinke, H. N. Cohn, P. M. Lugger, J. E. Grindlay

TL;DR
This study used Chandra X-ray observations to identify and analyze seven X-ray sources in the globular cluster NGC 6652, revealing unusual variability and spectral features that suggest diverse accretion phenomena and source types.
Contribution
First detailed X-ray analysis of NGC 6652 revealing seven sources with unique spectral and variability characteristics, including a flaring source and potential magnetically accreting systems.
Findings
Source B exhibits rapid flaring with possible obscuration effects.
Sources C and D show unusual soft spectra, indicating diverse source types.
Discovery of faint sources with varied spectral properties.
Abstract
Our 5 ks Chandra ACIS-S observation of the globular cluster NGC 6652 detected 7 X-ray sources, 3 of which are previously unidentified. This cluster hosts a well-known bright low-mass X-ray binary, source A (or XB 1832-330). Source B shows unusual rapid flaring variability, with an average L_X(0.5-10 keV) ~2*10^{34} ergs/s, but with minutes-long flares up to L_X=9*10^{34} ergs/s. Its spectrum can be fit by an absorbed power-law of photon index Gamma~1.24, and hardens as the countrate decreases. This suggests that part or all of the variation might be due to obscuration by the rim of a highly inclined accretion disk. Sources C and D, with L_X ~10^{33} ergs/s, have soft and unusual spectra. Source C requires a very soft component, with a spectrum peaking at 0.5 keV, which might be the hot polar cap of a magnetically accreting polar cataclysmic variable. Source D shows a soft spectrum…
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