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Soft excess in the quiescent Be/X-ray pulsar RX J0812.4–3114.

Authors :
Zhao, Yue
Heinke, Craig O
Tsygankov, Sergey S
Ho, Wynn C G
Potekhin, Alexander Y
Shaw, Aarran W
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; Sep2019, Vol. 488 Issue 3, p4427-4439, 13p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We report a 72 ks XMM–Newton observation of the Be/X-ray pulsar (BeXRP) RX J0812.4–3114 in quiescence (⁠|$L_X \approx 1.6\times 10^{33}\, \mathrm{erg\, s^{-1}}$|⁠). Intriguingly, we find a two-component spectrum, with a hard power-law (Γ ≈ 1.5) and a soft blackbody-like excess below ≈1 keV. The blackbody component is consistent in kT with a prior quiescent Chandra observation reported by Tsygankov et al. and has an inferred blackbody radius of ≈10 km, consistent with emission from the entire neutron star (NS) surface. There is also mild evidence for an absorption line at |$\approx 1$| and/or |$\approx 1.4\, \mathrm{keV}$|⁠. The hard component shows pulsations at P  ≈ 31.908 s (pulsed fraction 0.84 ± 0.10), agreeing with the pulse period seen previously in outbursts, but no pulsations were found in the soft excess (pulsed fraction |$\lesssim \!31\, {\rm per\, cent}$|⁠). We conclude that the pulsed hard component suggests low-level accretion on to the NS poles, while the soft excess seems to originate from the entire NS surface. We speculate that, in quiescence, the source switches between a soft thermal-dominated state (when the propeller effect is at work) and a relatively hard state with low-level accretion, and use the propeller cut-off to estimate the magnetic field of the system to be |$\lesssim\! 8.4\times 10^{11}\, \mathrm{G}$|⁠. We compare the quiescent thermal L<subscript>X</subscript> predicted by the standard deep crustal heating model to our observations and find that RX J0812.4–3114 has a high thermal L<subscript>X</subscript> , at or above the prediction for minimum cooling mechanisms. This suggests that RX J0812.4–3114 either contains a relatively low-mass NS with minimum cooling, or that the system may be young enough that the NS has not fully cooled from the supernova explosion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Volume :
488
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
138205774
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz1946