NuSTAR observation of a Type I X-ray burst from GRS 1741.9-2853
Nicolas M. Barri\`ere, Roman Krivonos, John A. Tomsick, Matteo, Bachetti, Steven E. Boggs, Deepto Chakrabarty, Finn E. Christensen, William, W. Craig, Charles J. Hailey, Fiona A. Harrison, Jaesub Hong, Kaya Mori,, Daniel Stern, William W. Zhang

TL;DR
This paper reports on NuSTAR observations of a faint neutron star binary, capturing a Type I X-ray burst with photospheric radius expansion, providing new distance estimates and potential spectral line detection during the burst.
Contribution
First detection of a Type I X-ray burst with photospheric radius expansion from GRS 1741.9-2853 using NuSTAR, including a new distance estimate and possible spectral line identification.
Findings
Distance to GRS 1741.9-2853 is approximately 7 kpc.
Detected a long decay tail in the burst.
Possible detection of a gravitationally redshifted absorption line.
Abstract
We report on two NuSTAR observations of GRS 1741.9-2853, a faint neutron star low mass X-ray binary burster located 10' away from the Galactic center. NuSTAR detected the source serendipitously as it was emerging from quiescence: its luminosity was erg~s on 2013 July 31, and erg~s in a second observation on 2013 August 3. A bright, 800-s long, H-triggered mixed H/He thermonuclear Type I burst with mild photospheric radius expansion (PRE) was present during the second observation. Assuming that the luminosity during the PRE was at the Eddington level, a H mass fraction in the atmosphere, and a neutron star mass , we determine a new lower limit on the distance for this source of kpc. Combining with previous upper limits, this places GRS 1741.9-2853 at a distance of 7 kpc. Energy independent…
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