Relativistic outflow from two thermonuclear shell flashes on neutron stars
Jean in 't Zand (SRON), Laurens Keek (CRA, Georgia Tech), Yuri, Cavecchi (API, Univ. Amsterdam)

TL;DR
This study investigates short precursors of thermonuclear X-ray bursts on neutron stars, explaining their super-Eddington fluxes with relativistic outflows and proposing detonations or rapid surface burning as underlying mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence suggesting detonations at shallow ignition depths and models relativistic outflows to explain super-Eddington fluxes in neutron star bursts.
Findings
Measured outflow velocities of 0.1c to 0.3c, the highest for thermonuclear flashes.
Short precursor rise times (~1 ms) inconsistent with deflagration models.
Simulation supports the possibility of detonations at shallow depths.
Abstract
We study the exceptionally short (32-41 ms) precursors of two intermediate-duration thermonuclear X-ray bursts observed with RXTE from the neutron stars in 4U 0614+09 and 2S 0918-549. They exhibit photon fluxes that surpass those at the Eddington limit later in the burst by factors of 2.6 to 3.1. We are able to explain both the short duration and the super-Eddington flux by mildly relativistic outflow velocities of 0.1 to 0.3 subsequent to the thermonuclear shell flashes on the neutron stars. These are the highest velocities ever measured from any thermonuclear flash. The precursor rise times are also exceptionally short: about 1 ms. This is inconsistent with predictions for nuclear flames spreading laterally as deflagrations and suggests detonations instead. This is the first time that a detonation is suggested for such a shallow ignition column depth ( = 10 g…
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