Abstract

We present the observations of an intense X-ray burst from the recurrent transient source SAXJ1747.0-2853 located near the Galactic center. The burst was detected by the ART-P telescope onboard the Granat observatory on October 20, 1991. The burst time profile exhibits features that clearly point to an increase in the photospheric radius of the neutron star at the burst onset. This increase is attributable to an expansion of its outer hydrogen-rich atmospheric envelope under radiation pressure. After hydrogen-envelope outflow and photospheric contraction, the radiation flux emerging from deep within the star continued to rise, which several seconds later led to a recurrent, weaker photospheric expansion attributable to the outflow of the outer helium-envelope layers. Based on the described picture, we determined the distance to the source, d=7.9±0.4 kpc. No radiation was detected by the ART-P telescope from the source in quiescence. Actually, the source itself was discovered only seven years later by the BeppoSAX satellite during its X-ray activity.

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