Monitoring the Galactic Bulge Region with the RXTE PCA

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

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Scientific paper

The RXTE PCA has been monitoring the galactic bulge region since February 1999, covering an area of approximately 250 square degrees in the 2--30 keV X-ray band, twice weekly. The survey is sensitive to new sources of <0.5 mCrab in the 2--10 keV band. To date, approximately 55 sources have been detected, both previously known and unknown. Some are transient and some are persistent, and some appear to fall into a separate class of source which are almost continuous emitters of X-rays but are highly variable. One of the sources newly discovered as variable, designated XTE J1710--281, shows X-ray eclipses with a 3.28 hr period, and also X-ray bursts and dips. Thus, it is a low mass X-ray binary system with a neutron star and a ~ 0.3 M_solar secondary. XTE J1710--281 has the shortest orbital period of the known dipper/eclipsers. We will discuss the properties of XTE J1710--281 and compare to the general population of galactic bulge sources.

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