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Featured researches published by Felix Fürst.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

The Ultraluminous X-Ray Sources NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2: A Broadband Study with NuSTAR and XMM-Newton

Matteo Bachetti; V. Rana; D. J. Walton; Didier Barret; Fiona A. Harrison; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; Andrew C. Fabian; Felix Fürst; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Ann Hornschemeier; Kristin K. Madsen; Jon M. Miller; Andrew F. Ptak; Daniel Stern; Natalie A. Webb; William W. Zhang

We present the results of NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observations of the two ultraluminous X-ray sources: NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2. The combined spectral bandpass of the two satellites enables us to produce the first spectrum of X-1 between 0.3 and 30 keV, while X-2 is not significantly detected by NuSTAR above 10 keV. The NuSTAR data demonstrate that X-1 has a clear cutoff above 10 keV, whose presence was only marginally detectable with previous X-ray observations. This cutoff rules out the interpretation of X-1 as a black hole in a standard low/hard state, and it is deeper than predicted for the downturn of a broadened iron line in a reflection-dominated regime. The cutoff differs from the prediction of a single-temperature Comptonization model. Further, a cold disk-like blackbody component at ~0.3 keV is required by the data, confirming previous measurements by XMM-Newton only. We observe a spectral transition in X-2, from a state with high luminosity and strong variability to a lower-luminosity state with no detectable variability, and we link this behavior to a transition from a super-Eddington to a sub-Eddington regime.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

THE REFLECTION COMPONENT FROM CYGNUS X-1 IN THE SOFT STATE MEASURED BY NuSTAR AND SUZAKU

John A. Tomsick; Michael A. Nowak; Michael C. Parker; Jon M. Miller; Andrew C. Fabian; Fiona A. Harrison; Matteo Bachetti; Didier Barret; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; Karl Forster; Felix Fürst; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Ashley L. King; Kristin K. Madsen; L. Natalucci; Katja Pottschmidt; R. R. Ross; Daniel Stern; D. J. Walton; J. Wilms; William W. Zhang

The black hole binary Cygnus X-1 was observed in late 2012 with the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) and Suzaku, providing spectral coverage over the ~1-300 keV range. The source was in the soft state with a multi-temperature blackbody, power law, and reflection components along with absorption from highly ionized material in the system. The high throughput of NuSTAR allows for a very high quality measurement of the complex iron line region as well as the rest of the reflection component. The iron line is clearly broadened and is well described by a relativistic blurring model, providing an opportunity to constrain the black hole spin. Although the spin constraint depends somewhat on which continuum model is used, we obtain ɑ_* > 0.83 for all models that provide a good description of the spectrum. However, none of our spectral fits give a disk inclination that is consistent with the most recently reported binary values for Cyg X-1. This may indicate that there is a >13° misalignment between the orbital plane and the inner accretion disk (i.e., a warped accretion disk) or that there is missing physics in the spectral models.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Discovery of Coherent Pulsations from the Ultraluminous X-Ray Source NGC 7793 P13

Felix Fürst; D. J. Walton; Fiona A. Harrison; D. Stern; Didier Barret; M. Brightman; A. C. Fabian; Brian W. Grefenstette; K. K. Madsen; Matthew J. Middleton; Josef M. Miller; Katja Pottschmidt; A. Ptak; V. Rana; N. Webb

We report the detection of coherent pulsations from the ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) NGC 7793 P13. The ≈0.42 s nearly sinusoidal pulsations were initially discovered in broadband X-ray observations using XMM-Newton and NuSTAR taken in 2016. We subsequently also found pulsations in archival XMM-Newton data taken in 2013 and 2014. The significant (≫5σ) detection of coherent pulsations demonstrates that the compact object in P13 is a neutron star, and given the observed peak luminosity of ≈10^(40) erg s^(-1) (assuming isotropy), it is well above the Eddington limit for a 1.4 M⊙ accretor. This makes P13 the second ULX known to be powered by an accreting neutron star. The pulse period varies between epochs, with a slow but persistent spin-up over the 2013–2016 period. This spin-up indicates a magnetic field of B ≈ 1.5 × 10^(12) G, typical of many Galactic accreting pulsars. The most likely explanation for the extreme luminosity is a high degree of beaming; however, this is difficult to reconcile with the sinusoidal pulse profile.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

X-Ray Variation Statistics and Wind Clumping in Vela X-1

Felix Fürst; Ingo Kreykenbohm; Katja Pottschmidt; Joern Wilms; Manfred Hanke; Richard E. Rothschild; Peter Kretschmar; Norbert S. Schulz; David P. Huenemoerder; D. Klochkov; Rüdiger Staubert

We investigate the structure of the wind in the neutron star X-ray binary system Vela X-1 by analyzing its flaring behavior. Vela X-1 shows constant flaring, with some flares reaching fluxes of more than 3.0 Crab between 20‐60 keV for several 100 seconds, while the average flux is around 250 mCrab. We analyzed all archival INTEGRAL data, calculating the brightness distribution in the 20‐60 keV band, which, as we show, closely follows a log-normal distribution. Orbital resolved analysis shows that the structure is strongly variable, explainable by shocks and a fluctuating accretion wake. Analysis of RXTE ASM data suggests a strong orbital change of NH. Accreted clump masses derived from the INTEGRAL data are on the order of 5 10 19 ‐10 21 g. We show that the lightcurve can be described with a model of multiplicative random numbers. In the course of the simulation we calculate the power spectral density of the system in the 20‐100 keV energy band and show that it follows a red-noise power law. We suggest that a mixture of a clumpy wind, shocks, and turbulence can explain the measured mass distribution. As the recently discovered class of supergiant fast X-ray transients (SFXT) seems to show the same parameters for the wind, the link between persistent HMXB like Vela X-1 and SFXT is further strengthened.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

NuSTAR discovery of a luminosity dependent cyclotron line energy in Vela X-1

Felix Fürst; Katja Pottschmidt; J. Wilms; John A. Tomsick; Matteo Bachetti; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; Kristin K. Madsen; Jon M. Miller; Daniel Stern; D. J. Walton; William W. Zhang

We present NuSTAR observations of Vela X-1, a persistent, yet highly variable, neutron star high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB). Two observations were taken at similar orbital phases but separated by nearly a year. They show very different 3–79 keV flux levels as well as strong variability during each observation, covering almost one order of magnitude in flux. These observations allow, for the first time ever, investigations on kilo-second time-scales of how the centroid energies of cyclotron resonant scattering features (CRSFs) depend on flux for a persistent HMXB. We find that the line energy of the harmonic CRSF is correlated with flux, as expected in the sub-critical accretion regime. We argue that Vela X-1 has a very narrow accretion column with a radius of around 0.4 km that sustains a Coulomb interaction dominated shock at the observed luminosities of L_x ~ 3 × 10^36 erg s^−1. Besides the prominent harmonic line at 55 keV the fundamental line around 25 keV is clearly detected. We find that the strengths of the two CRSFs are anti-correlated, which we explain by photon spawning. This anti-correlation is a possible explanation for the debate about the existence of the fundamental line. The ratio of the line energies is variable with time and deviates significantly from 2.0, also a possible consequence of photon spawning, which changes the shape of the line. During the second observation, Vela X-1 showed a short off-state in which the power-law softened and a cut-off was no longer measurable. It is likely that the source switched to a different accretion regime at these low mass accretion rates, explaining the drastic change in spectral shape.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Broadband XMM-Newton and NuSTAR X-Ray Spectra of Two Ultraluminous X-Ray Sources in the Galaxy IC?342

V. Rana; Fiona A. Harrison; Matteo Bachetti; D. J. Walton; Felix Fürst; Didier Barret; Jon M. Miller; Andrew C. Fabian; Steven E. Boggs; Finn C. Christensen; William W. Craig; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Kristin K. Madsen; Andrew F. Ptak; Daniel Stern; Natalie A. Webb; William W. Zhang

We present results for two Ultraluminous X-ray Sources (ULXs), IC 342 X-1 and IC 342 X-2, using two epochs of XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations separated by ~ 7 days. We observe little spectral or ux variability above 1 keV between epochs, with unabsorbed 0.3-30 keV luminosities being 1.04^(+0.08)_(-0.06) x 10^(40) erg s^(-1) for IC 342 X-1 and 7.40 ± 0.20 x 10^(39) erg s^(-1) for IC 342 X-2, so that both were observed in a similar, luminous state. Both sources have a high absorbing column in excess of the Galactic value. Neither source has a spectrum consistent with a black hole binary in low/hard state, and both ULXs exhibit strong curvature in their broadband X-ray spectra. This curvature rules out models that invoke a simple reflection-dominated spectrum with a broadened iron line and no cutoff in the illuminating power-law continuum. X-ray spectrum of IC 342 X-1 can be characterized by a soft disk-like black body component at low energies and a cool, optically thick Comptonization continuum at high energies, but unique physical interpretation of the spectral components remains challenging. The broadband spectrum of IC 342 X-2 can be fit by either a hot (3.8 keV) accretion disk, or a Comptonized continuum with no indication of a seed photon population. Although the seed photon component may be masked by soft excess emission unlikely to be associated with the binary system, combined with the high absorption column, it is more plausible that the broadband X-ray emission arises from a simple thin blackbody disk component. Secure identification of the origin of the spectral components in these sources will likely require broadband spectral variability studies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Suzaku Observations of the HMXB 1A 1118-61

Slawomir Suchy; Katja Pottschmidt; Richard E. Rothschild; J. Wilms; Felix Fürst; Laura Martin Barragan; Isabel Caballero; V. Grinberg; Ingo Kreykenbohm; V. Doroshenko; A. Santangelo; Rüdiger Staubert; Yukikatsu Terada; Wataru Iwakari; Kazuo Makishima

We present broadband analysis of the Be/X-ray transient 1A 1118-61 by Suzaku at the peak of its third observed outburst in 2009 January and two weeks later when the source flux had decayed by an order of magnitude. The continuum was modeled with a cutoffpl model as well as a compTT model, with both cases requiring an additional blackbody component at lower energies. We confirm the detection of a cyclotron line at {approx}55 keV and discuss the possibility of a first harmonic at {approx}110 keV. Pulse profile comparisons show a change in the profile structure at lower energies, an indication for possible changes in the accretion geometry. Phase-resolved spectroscopy in the outburst data shows a change in the continuum throughout the pulse period. The decrease in the cyclotron resonance scattering feature centroid energy also indicates that the viewing angle on the accretion column is changing throughout the pulse period.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

A Hard X-Ray Power-law Spectral Cutoff in Centaurus X-4

Deepto Chakrabarty; John A. Tomsick; Brian W. Grefenstette; Dimitrios Psaltis; Matteo Bachetti; Didier Barret; Steven E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; Felix Fürst; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; Victoria M. Kaspi; Jon M. Miller; Michael A. Nowak; V. Rana; Daniel Stern; Daniel R. Wik; J. Wilms; William W. Zhang

The low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) Cen X-4 is the brightest and closest (<1.2 kpc) quiescent neutron star transient. Previous 0.5-10 keV X-ray observations of Cen X-4 in quiescence identified two spectral components: soft thermal emission from the neutron star atmosphere and a hard power-law tail of unknown origin. We report here on a simultaneous observation of Cen X-4 with NuSTAR (3-79 keV) and XMM-Newton (0.3-10 keV) in 2013 January, providing the first sensitive hard X-ray spectrum of a quiescent neutron star transient. The 0.3-79 keV luminosity was 1.1 x 10^(33) D^2_(kpc erg s^(–1), with ≃ 60% in the thermal component. We clearly detect a cutoff of the hard spectral tail above 10 keV, the first time such a feature has been detected in this source class. We show that thermal Comptonization and synchrotron shock origins for the hard X-ray emission are ruled out on physical grounds. However, the hard X-ray spectrum is well fit by a thermal bremsstrahlung model with kT_e = 18 keV, which can be understood as arising either in a hot layer above the neutron star atmosphere or in a radiatively inefficient accretion flow. The power-law cutoff energy may be set by the degree of Compton cooling of the bremsstrahlung electrons by thermal seed photons from the neutron star surface. Lower thermal luminosities should lead to higher (possibly undetectable) cutoff energies. We compare Cen X-4s behavior with PSR J1023+0038, IGR J18245–2452, and XSS J12270–4859, which have shown transitions between LMXB and radio pulsar modes at a similar X-ray luminosity.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The complex accretion geometry of GX 339-4 as seen by NuSTAR and Swift

Felix Fürst; Michael A. Nowak; John A. Tomsick; Josef M. Miller; S. Corbel; Matteo Bachetti; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; A. C. Fabian; P. Gandhi; V. Grinberg; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; E. Kara; J. A. Kennea; K. K. Madsen; Katja Pottschmidt; D. Stern; D. J. Walton; J. Wilms; William W. Zhang

We present spectral analysis of five NuSTAR and Swift observations of GX 339−4 taken during a failed outburst in summer 2013. These observations cover Eddington luminosity fractions in the range ≈0.9–6%. Throughout this outburst, GX 339−4 stayed in the hard state, and all five observations show similar X-ray spectra with a hard power-law with a photon index near 1.6 and significant contribution from reflection. Using simple reflection models we find unrealistically high iron abundances. Allowing for different photon indices for the continuum incident on the reflector relative to the underlying observed continuum results in a statistically better fit and reduced iron abundances. With a photon index around 1.3, the input power-law on the reflector is significantly harder than that which is directly observed. We study the influence of different emissivity profiles and geometries and consistently find an improvement when using separate photon indices. The inferred inner accretion disk radius is strongly model dependent, but we do not find evidence for a truncation radius larger than 100 r g in any model. The data do not allow independent spin constraints but the results are consistent with the literature (i.e., a > 0). Our best-fit models indicate an inclination angle in the range 40–60 • , consistent with limits on the orbital inclination but higher than reported in the literature using standard reflection models. The iron line around 6.4 keV is clearly broadened, and we detect a superimposed narrow core as well. This core originates from a fluorescence region outside the influence of the strong gravity of the black hole and we discuss possible geometries.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

NuSTAR and Suzaku observations of the hard state in Cygnus X-1: locating the inner accretion disk

M. L. Parker; John A. Tomsick; Josef M. Miller; Kazutaka Yamaoka; Anne M. Lohfink; Martin A. Nowak; A. C. Fabian; W. N. Alston; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; Felix Fürst; P. Gandhi; Brian W. Grefenstette; V. Grinberg; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; E. Kara; Ashley L. King; D. Stern; D. J. Walton; J. Wilms; William W. Zhang

We present simultaneous Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR ) and Suzaku observations of the X-ray binary Cygnus X-1 in the hard state. This is the first time this state has been observed in Cyg X-1 with NuSTAR, which enables us to study the reflection and broadband spectra in unprecedented detail. We confirm that the iron line cannot be fit with a combination of narrow lines and absorption features, instead requiring a relativistically blurred profile in combination with a narrow line and absorption from the companion wind. We use the reflection models of Garcia et al. to simultaneously measure the black hole spin, disk inner radius, and coronal height in a self-consistent manner. Detailed fits to the iron line profile indicate a high level of relativistic blurring, indicative of reflection from the inner accretion disk. We find a high spin, a small inner disk radius, and a low source height and rule out truncation to greater than three gravitational radii at the 3σ confidence level. In addition, we find that the line profile has not changed greatly in the switch from soft to hard states, and that the differences are consistent with changes in the underlying reflection spectrum rather than the relativistic blurring. We find that the blurring parameters are consistent when fitting either just the iron line or the entire broadband spectrum, which is well modeled with a Comptonized continuum plus reflection model.

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Katja Pottschmidt

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. Wilms

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Fiona A. Harrison

California Institute of Technology

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D. J. Walton

University of Cambridge

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William W. Zhang

Goddard Space Flight Center

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