Suzaku Monitoring of Hard X-Ray Emission from η Carinae over a Single Binary Orbital Cycle

Hamaguchi, Kenji; Corcoran, Michael F.; Ishida, Manabu; Russell, Christopher M. P.; Gull, Theodore R.; Takahashi, Hiromitsu; Yuasa, Takayuki; Madura, Thomas I.; Pittard, Julian M.

United States, Japan, United Kingdom

Abstract

The Suzaku X-ray observatory monitored the supermassive binary system η Carinae 10 times during the whole 5.5 yr orbital cycle between 2005 and 2011. This series of observations presents the first long-term monitoring of this enigmatic system in the extremely hard X-ray band between 15 and 40 keV. During most of the orbit, the 15-25 keV emission varied similarly to the 2-10 keV emission, indicating an origin in the hard energy tail of the kT ~ 4 keV wind-wind collision (WWC) plasma. However, the 15-25 keV emission declined only by a factor of three around periastron when the 2-10 keV emission dropped by two orders of magnitude due probably to an eclipse of the WWC plasma. The observed minimum in the 15-25 keV emission occurred after the 2-10 keV flux had already recovered by a factor of ~3. This may mean that the WWC activity was strong, but hidden behind the thick primary stellar wind during the eclipse. The 25-40 keV flux was rather constant through the orbital cycle, at the level measured with INTEGRAL in 2004. This result may suggest a connection of this flux component to the γ-ray source detected in this field. The helium-like Fe Kα line complex at ~6.7 keV became strongly distorted toward periastron as seen in the previous cycle. The 5-9 keV spectra can be reproduced well with a two-component spectral model, which includes plasma in collision equilibrium and a plasma in non-equilibrium ionization (NEI) with τ ~ 1011 cm-3 s-1. The NEI plasma increases in importance toward periastron.

2014 The Astrophysical Journal
XMM-Newton Suzaku INTEGRAL 14