The hard X-ray outburst of GRO J1655-40 as followed by the INTEGRAL Galactic Bulge monitoring program
The region around our Galactic center, the Galactic bulge, is rich in bright and variable high-energy
X-ray and gamma-ray sources. From the start of the guest observer program AO-3, February 17, 2005,
a program is in place (PI: Kuulkers) to observe this region regularly, using the European gamma-ray
satellite INTEGRAL. One complete hexagonal dither pattern (7 pointings of 1800 sec each) is performed
during each INTEGRAL revolution (i.e., every 3 days) whenever the region is observable.
As a service to the scientific community, the IBIS/ISGRI and JEM-X light curves in two energy bands
(20-60 keV, 60-150 keV and 3-10 keV, 10-25 keV, respectively) of the sources detected in the field of
view, as well as IBIS/ISGRI mosaic images, are made publicly available as soon as possible after the
observations are performed. The results, as well as more information about the program, can be retrieved
from http://isdc.unige.ch/Science/BULGE/. This program was announced to the world in
ATel #438.
Precisely at the start of this program the black-hole X-ray transient GRO J1655-40 was reported
to become active (see ATel #414).
The light curve shown here is derived from the IBIS/ISGRI 20-60 keV band 1800 sec exposures
obtained up to now (about 150 counts/s corresponds to 1 Crab on-axis). It shows the evolution
over the last couple of weeks and demonstrates the wealth of the monitoring program. Note that
it nicely complements observations at
soft X-ray (RXTE)
and
radio (VLA)
wavelengths.
Indicated are also the INTEGRAL revolution numbers to which each cluster of data points corresponds to.
When pointing with the mouse over each time span of observations, the mean 20-60 keV mosaiced image appears
corresponding to each complete dither observation, which shows the detection significances on
a square root colour scale. The brightest sources are annotated. Clearly, most of the sources
vary on timescales down to a few days. Note that GRO J1655-40 was observed at a large off-axis angle
(~15 degrees from the center of the field of view; so is in the partially coded field of view of
IBIS/ISGRI and not visible with X-ray monitor JEM-X).
Credits: M. Homminga (ESA/ESAC), E. Kuulkers (PI; ESA/ESAC), S. Shaw (Southampton/UK & ISDC/Geneva),
and the rest of the Galactic Bulge monitoring team.