A Chandra observation of the millisecond X-ray pulsar IGR J17511-3057
A. Paizis, M. A. Nowak, J. Rodriguez, J. Wilms, S. Chaty, M. Del, Santo, P. Ubertini

TL;DR
This paper reports a detailed Chandra X-ray observation of the millisecond pulsar IGR J17511-3057, including precise positioning, analysis of persistent emission, and characterization of a type-I X-ray burst, confirming previous outburst properties.
Contribution
First high-precision X-ray position and spectral analysis of IGR J17511-3057 during its 2009 outburst, including burst characterization and spectral modeling.
Findings
Accurate X-ray position determined with 0.6" uncertainty.
Detected a 54-second type-I X-ray burst with specific spectral properties.
Persistent emission described by thermal Comptonization model.
Abstract
IGR J17511-3057 is a low mass X-ray binary hosting a neutron star and is one of the few accreting millisecond X-ray pulsars with X-ray bursts. We report on a 20ksec Chandra grating observation of IGR J17511-3057, performed on 2009 September 22. We determine the most accurate X-ray position of IGR J17511-3057, alpha(J2000) = 17h 51m 08.66s, delta(J2000) = -30deg 57' 41.0" (90% uncertainty of 0.6"). During the observation, a ~54sec long type-I X-ray burst is detected. The persistent (non-burst) emission has an absorbed 0.5-8keV luminosity of 1.7 x 10^36 erg/sec (at 6.9kpc) and can be well described by a thermal Comptonization model of soft, ~0.6keV, seed photons up-scattered by a hot corona. The type-I X-ray burst spectrum, with average luminosity over the 54sec duration L(0.5-8keV)=1.6 x 10^37 erg/sec, can be well described by a blackbody with kT_(bb)~1.6keV and R_(bb)~5km. While an…
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