Abstract The 2.1-s anomalous X-ray pulsar 1E 1547.0−5408 exhibited an X-ray outburst on 2009 January 22, emitting a large number of short bursts. The wide-band all-sky monitor (WAM) on-board Suzaku detected at least 254 bursts in the 160 keV–6.2 MeV band over the period of January 22 00:57–17:02 UT from the direction of 1E 1547.0−5408. One of these bursts, which occurred at 06:45:13, produced the brightest fluence in the 0.5–6.2 MeV range, with an averaged 0.16–6.2 MeV flux and extrapolated 25 keV–2 MeV fluence of about 1 × 10−5 erg cm−2 s−1 and about 3 × 10−4 erg cm−2, respectively. After pile-up corrections, the time-resolved WAM spectra of this burst were well-fitted in the 0.16–6.2 MeV range by two-component models; specifically, a blackbody plus an optically thin thermal bremsstrahlung or a combination of a blackbody and a power-law component with an exponential cut-off. These results are compared with previous works reporting the persistent emission and weaker short bursts followed by the same outburst.
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