Broadband Spectral Investigations of SGR J1550-5418 Bursts
Lin Lin, Ersin Gogus, Matthew G. Baring, Jonathan Granot, Chryssa, Kouveliotou, Yuki Kaneko, Alexander van der Horst, David Gruber, Andreas von, Kienlin, George Younes, Anna L. Watts, Neil Gehrels

TL;DR
This study performs broadband spectral analysis of SGR J1550-5418 bursts, revealing they are better described by thermal blackbody models and showing that burst sites are likely not co-located with persistent emission regions.
Contribution
First broadband spectral analysis of SGR J1550-5418 bursts demonstrating a preference for blackbody models and insights into burst site locations relative to persistent emission.
Findings
Burst spectra are better fit by two blackbody functions than Comptonized models.
Burst counts show no correlation with persistent X-ray pulse phase.
Surface magnetic field inhomogeneity influences burst triggering regions.
Abstract
We present the results of our broadband spectral analysis of 42 SGR J1550-5418 bursts simultaneously detected with the Swift/X-ray Telescope (XRT) and the Fermi/Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM), during the 2009 January active episode of the source. The unique spectral and temporal capabilities of the XRT Windowed Timing mode have allowed us to extend the GBM spectral coverage for these events down to the X-ray domain (0.5-10 keV). Our earlier analysis of the GBM data found that the SGR J1550-5418 burst spectra were described equally well with a Comptonized model or with two blackbody functions; the two models were statistically indistinguishable. Our new broadband (0.5 - 200 keV) spectral fits show that, on average, the burst spectra are better described with two blackbody functions than with the Comptonized model. Thus, our joint XRT/GBM analysis clearly shows for the first time that the…
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