We present the results of a broad-band X-ray study of the enigmatic Be star Gamma Cassiopeiae (herein g Cas) based on observations made with both the INTEGRAL and Suzaku. g Cas has long been recognized as the prototypical example of a small subclass of Be stars with moder-ately strong X-ray emission dominated by a hot thermal component in the 0.5-12 keV energy range (Lx ≈ 1032−1033 erg s−1). This places them at the high end of the known luminosity dis-tribution for stellar emission, but several orders of magnitude below typical accretion powered Be X-ray binaries. The INTEGRAL observations spanned an 8 year baseline and represent the deepest measurement to date at energies above ∼ 50 keV. We find that the INTEGRAL data are consistent within...
A detailed analysis of more than 800 electronic high-resolution spectra of gamma Cas, which were obt...
peer reviewedABSTRACT Massive stars are known X-ray emitters and those belonging to ...
ABSTRACT. We present the results of high-resolution spectroscopic observations of the bright Be star...
An exciting unsolved problem in the study of high energy processes of early type stars concerns the ...
gamma Cas is the prototypical classical Be star and is recently best known for its variable hard X-r...
Gamma Cassiopeiae is an enigmatic Be star with unusually strong hard X-ray emission. The Suzaku obse...
gamma Cas is the prototypical classical B0.5e star and is now known to be the primary in a wide bina...
An exciting unsolved problem in the study of high energy processes of early type stars concerns the ...
International audienceIn the last years, a peculiarity of some Be stars – their association with unu...
We report the discovery with XMM-Newton of a hard-thermal (T similar to 130 MK) and variable X-ray e...
The γ Cas category is a subgroup of Be stars displaying a strong, hard, and variable thermal X-ray e...
gamma Cas has long been famous for its unique hard X-ray characteristics. We report herein on a 53 k...
International audienceUsing observations from Chandra, Swift and XMM-Newton, we investigate the high...
We report on the results of a deep 1.6 Ms INTEGRAL observation of the Cassiopeia region performed fr...
The γ Cas category is a subgroup of Be stars displaying a strong, hard, and variable thermal X-ray e...
A detailed analysis of more than 800 electronic high-resolution spectra of gamma Cas, which were obt...
peer reviewedABSTRACT Massive stars are known X-ray emitters and those belonging to ...
ABSTRACT. We present the results of high-resolution spectroscopic observations of the bright Be star...
An exciting unsolved problem in the study of high energy processes of early type stars concerns the ...
gamma Cas is the prototypical classical Be star and is recently best known for its variable hard X-r...
Gamma Cassiopeiae is an enigmatic Be star with unusually strong hard X-ray emission. The Suzaku obse...
gamma Cas is the prototypical classical B0.5e star and is now known to be the primary in a wide bina...
An exciting unsolved problem in the study of high energy processes of early type stars concerns the ...
International audienceIn the last years, a peculiarity of some Be stars – their association with unu...
We report the discovery with XMM-Newton of a hard-thermal (T similar to 130 MK) and variable X-ray e...
The γ Cas category is a subgroup of Be stars displaying a strong, hard, and variable thermal X-ray e...
gamma Cas has long been famous for its unique hard X-ray characteristics. We report herein on a 53 k...
International audienceUsing observations from Chandra, Swift and XMM-Newton, we investigate the high...
We report on the results of a deep 1.6 Ms INTEGRAL observation of the Cassiopeia region performed fr...
The γ Cas category is a subgroup of Be stars displaying a strong, hard, and variable thermal X-ray e...
A detailed analysis of more than 800 electronic high-resolution spectra of gamma Cas, which were obt...
peer reviewedABSTRACT Massive stars are known X-ray emitters and those belonging to ...
ABSTRACT. We present the results of high-resolution spectroscopic observations of the bright Be star...