Context. White dwarfs (WDs) in cataclysmic variables (CVs) are important experimental laboratories where the electron degeneracy is taking place on a macroscopic scale. Magnetic CVs increase in number especially in the hard X-ray band ( 10 keV) thanks to sensitive hard X-ray missions. Aims. From X-ray spectroscopy, we estimate the masses of nearby WDs in moderately-magnetized CVs, or Intermediate Polars (IPs). Methods. Using the Suzaku satellite, we aquired wide-band spectra of 17 IPs, covering 3−50 keV. An accretion column model of Suleimanov et al. (2005, A&A, 435, 191) and an optically-thin thermal emission code were used to construct a spectral emission model of IPs with resolved Fe emission lines. By simultaneously fitting the Fe line complex and the hard X-ray continuum of individual spectra, the shock temperature and the WD mass were determined with a better accuracy than in previous studies. Results. We determined the WD masses of the 17 IPs with statistical fitting errors of 0.1−0.2 M in many cases. The WD mass of a recently-found IP, IGR J17195-4100, was also estimated for the first time (1.03 +0.24 −0.22 M ). The average WD mass of the sample is 0.88 ± 0.25 M . When our results were compared with previous X-ray mass determinations, we found significant deviation in a few systems although the reason of this is unclear. The iron abundance of the accreting gas was also estimated, and confirmed the previously reported sub-solar tendency in all sources with better accuracy.
We report the results of the Suzaku X-ray observation of XSS J12270-4859, one of the hard X-ray sources in the INTEGRAL catalogue. The object has been classified as an intermediate polar (IP) by optical spectra and a putative X-ray period of ∼860 s. With a 30 ks exposure of Suzaku, we obtained a well-exposed spectrum in the 0.2-70 keV band. We conclude against the previous IP classification based on the lack of Fe Kα emission features in the spectrum and the failure to confirm the previously reported X-ray period. Instead, the X-ray light curve is filled with exotic phenomena, including repetitive flares lasting ∼100 s, occasional dips with no apparent periodicities, spectral hardening after some flares, and bimodal changes pivoting between quiet and active phases. The rapid flux changes, the dips, and the power-law spectrum point toward the interpretation that this is a low-mass X-ray binary. Some temporal characteristics are similar to those in the Rapid Burster and GRO J1744-28, making XSS J12270-4859 a very rare object.
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