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Title: Soft x-ray pulsations from SS Cyngi

Journal Article · · Astrophys. J.; (United States)
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/157621· OSTI ID:5662096

Pulsed soft X-rays (0.1--0.5 keV) with a period of 9 s and a pulsed fraction that varies between 0 and 100% were detected from the dwarf nova SS Cygni at the peak of an optical outburst. This detection confirms for the first time the supposed high-energy origin of optical pulsations seen in erupting dwarf novae. The pulse shape is remarkably sinusoidal for such a large amplitude oscillation. The X-ray pulsation observed in this outburst is not coherent, in contrast to previous claims for the related optical oscillations. Instead, the phase of the pulsation apparently executes a random walk with a Q of approx.25, whereas the period is quite stable: Papprox.-1 x 10/sup -5/ s s/sup -1/. There is no evidence for any other periodic behavior on time scales between 160 ms and 3 hr. A blackbody fit to the observed spectrum yields Tapprox.3.5 x 10/sup 5/ K and a flux at the Earth of approx.4.5 x 10/sup -11/ ergs cm/sup -2/ s/sup -1/ in the 1/4 keV band. This in turn implies a total luminosity (integrated over all frequencies) at the source of approx.1.8 x 10/sup 33/ x (d/200 pc)/sup 2/ ergs s/sup -1/. Previous models for the optical oscillations fail to account for the properties of the X-ray pulsation. It is possible that an as yet unspecified instability in the boundary layer between the white dwarf and the acretion disk is the origin of the pulsation.

Research Organization:
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
OSTI ID:
5662096
Journal Information:
Astrophys. J.; (United States), Vol. 235:1
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English