# NICER Discovers Spectral Lines During Photospheric Radius Expansion   Bursts from 4U 1820-30: Evidence for Burst-driven Winds

**Authors:** T. E. Strohmayer, D. Altamirano, Z. Arzoumanian, P. M. Bult, D., Chakrabarty, J. Chenevez, A. C. Fabian, K. C. Gendreau, S. Guillot, J. J. M., in 't Zand, G. K. Jaisawal, L. Keek, P. Kosec, R. M. Ludlam, S. Mahmoodifar,, C. Malacaria, and J. M. Miller

arXiv: 1906.00974 · 2019-06-19

## TL;DR

NICER detected spectral lines during PRE bursts from 4U 1820-30, revealing evidence of burst-driven winds and gravitational red-shifts, advancing understanding of neutron star atmospheres and outflows.

## Contribution

This study presents the first detection of spectral lines during PRE bursts from 4U 1820-30, providing new insights into burst-driven winds and neutron star atmospheres.

## Key findings

- Detection of narrow emission and absorption lines near 1 keV, 1.7 keV, and 3.0 keV.
- Blue-shifted spectral lines indicating wind outflows and gravitational effects.
- Correlation between PRE strength, photospheric radius, and line shifts.

## Abstract

We report the discovery with the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) of narrow emission and absorption lines during photospheric radius expansion (PRE) X-ray bursts from the ultracompact binary 4U 1820-30. NICER observed the source in 2017 August accumulating about 60 ks of exposure. Five thermonuclear X-ray bursts were detected of which four showed clear signs of PRE. We extracted spectra during the PRE phases and fit each to a model that includes a comptonized component to describe the accretion-driven emission, and a black body for the burst thermal radiation. The temperature and spherical emitting radius of the fitted black body are used to assess the strength of PRE in each burst. The two strongest PRE bursts (burst pair 1) had black body temperatures of approximately 0.6 keV and emitting radii of 100 km (at a distance of 8.4 kpc). The other two bursts (burst pair 2) had higher temperatures (~0.67 keV) and smaller radii (75 km). All of the PRE bursts show evidence of narrow line emission near 1 keV. By co-adding the PRE phase spectra of burst pairs 1 and, separately, 2 we find, in both co-added spectra, significant, narrow, spectral features near 1.0 (emission), 1.7 and 3.0 keV (both in absorption). Remarkably, all the fitted line centroids in the co-added spectrum of burst pair 1 appear systematically blue-shifted by a factor of $1.046 \pm 0.006$ compared to the centroids of pair 2, strongly indicative of a gravitational red-shift, a wind-induced blue-shift, or more likely some combination of both effects. The observed shifts are consistent with this scenario in that the stronger PRE bursts in pair 1 reach larger photospheric radii, and thus have weaker gravitational red-shifts, and they generate faster outflows, yielding higher blue-shifts. We discuss possible elemental identifications for the observed features in the context of recent burst-driven wind models.

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00974/full.md

## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00974/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00974