Spectral monitoring of RX J1856.5-3754 with XMM-Newton. Analysis of EPIC-pn data
N. Sartore, A. Tiengo, S. Mereghetti, A. De Luca, R. Turolla, and F., Haberl

TL;DR
This study analyzed XMM-Newton data of the neutron star RX J1856.5-3754 over several years, finding minimal spectral and flux variability likely due to instrumental effects, and modeling its spectrum with two blackbodies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spectral analysis of RX J1856.5-3754 over a long period, highlighting instrumental effects and establishing constraints on its variability and spectral features.
Findings
Minimal intrinsic spectral variability detected
Instrumental effects influence temperature measurements
Spectrum best fitted with two blackbody components
Abstract
Using a large set of XMM-Newton observations we searched for long term spectral and flux variability of the isolated neutron star RX J1856.5-3754 in the time interval from April 2002 to October 2011. This is the brightest and most extensively observed source of a small group of nearby, thermally emitting isolated neutron stars, of which at least one member (RX J0720.4-3125, Hohle et al., 2010) has shown long term variability. A detailed analysis of the data obtained with the EPIC-pn camera in the 0.15-1.2 keV energy range reveals small variations in the temperature derived with a single blackbody fit (of the order of 1% around kT^inf \sim 61 eV). Such variations are correlated with the position of the source on the detector and can be ascribed to an instrumental effect, most likely a spatial dependence of the channel to energy relation. For the sampled instrumental coordinates, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
