The Fermi-GBM X-ray burst monitor: thermonuclear bursts from 4U 0614+09
M. Linares (1), V. Connaughton (2), P. Jenke (3), A. J. van der Horst, (4), A. Camero-Arranz (5,8), C. Kouveliotou (3), D. Chakrabarty (1), E., Beklen (7), P. N. Bhat (2), M. S. Briggs (2), M. Finger (5), W. Paciesas (5),, R. Preece (2), A. von Kienlin (6)

TL;DR
This study used the Fermi-GBM to detect and analyze thermonuclear X-ray bursts from the neutron star binary 4U 0614+09, revealing insights into burst recurrence, energy distribution, and observational biases.
Contribution
First systematic all-sky search with Fermi-GBM identified 15 thermonuclear bursts from 4U 0614+09, providing new data on burst energies and recurrence times.
Findings
Detected 15 bursts with an average recurrence time of 12 days.
Burst energies form a continuous distribution between normal and long bursts.
Bimodal classification may be biased by observational limitations.
Abstract
Thermonuclear bursts from slowly accreting neutron stars (NSs) have proven difficult to detect, yet they are potential probes of the thermal properties of the neutron star interior. During the first year of a systematic all-sky search for X-ray bursts using the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope we have detected 15 thermonuclear bursts from the NS low-mass X-ray binary 4U 0614+09, when it was accreting at nearly 1% of the Eddington limit. We measured an average burst recurrence time of 12+/-3 d (68% confidence interval) between March 2010 and March 2011, classified all bursts as normal duration bursts and placed a lower limit on the recurrence time of long/intermediate bursts of 62 d (95% confidence level). We discuss how observations of thermonuclear bursts in the hard X-ray band compare to pointed soft X-ray observations, and quantify such…
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