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1FGL J1417.7-4407: A likely gamma-ray bright binary with a massive neutron star and a giant secondary

Authors :
Dana Koeppe
Jamie Stevens
Laura Chomiuk
David J. Sand
J. B. Haislip
R. Salinas
Leonid Petrov
Philip G. Edwards
Thomas Finzell
Davide Donato
Robin H. D. Corbet
Jay Strader
C. C. Cheung
Daniel E. Reichart
Mark B. Peacock
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
arXiv, 2015.

Abstract

We present multiwavelength observations of the persistent Fermi-LAT unidentified gamma-ray source 1FGL J1417.7-4407, showing it is likely to be associated with a newly discovered X-ray binary containing a massive neutron star (nearly 2 M_sun) and a ~ 0.35 M_sun giant secondary with a 5.4 day period. SOAR optical spectroscopy at a range of orbital phases reveals variable double-peaked H-alpha emission, consistent with the presence of an accretion disk. The lack of radio emission and evidence for a disk suggests the gamma-ray emission is unlikely to originate in a pulsar magnetosphere, but could instead be associated with a pulsar wind, relativistic jet, or could be due to synchrotron self-Compton at the disk--magnetosphere boundary. Assuming a wind or jet, the high ratio of gamma-ray to X-ray luminosity (~ 20) suggests efficient production of gamma-rays, perhaps due to the giant companion. The system appears to be a low-mass X-ray binary that has not yet completed the pulsar recycling process. This system is a good candidate to monitor for a future transition between accretion-powered and rotational-powered states, but in the context of a giant secondary.<br />Comment: ApJL in press

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f8c2715114721b32265f6f76e30adb1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1502.05999