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SXP214, an X-ray Pulsar in the Small Magellanic Cloud, Crossing the Circumstellar Disk of the Companion

Authors :
Hong, JaeSub
Antoniou, Vallia
Zezas, Andreas
Haberl, Frank
Drake, Jeremy J.
Plucinsky, Paul P.
Gaetz, Terrance
Sasaki, Manami
Williams, Benjamin
Long, Knox S.
Blair, William P.
Winkler, P. Frank
Wright, Nicholas J.
Laycock, Silas
Udalski, Andrzej
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Located in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), SXP214 is an X-ray pulsar in a high mass X-ray binary system with a Be-star companion. A recent survey of the SMC under a Chandra X-ray Visionary program found the source in a transition when the X-ray flux was on a steady rise. The Lomb-Scargle periodogram revealed a pulse period of 211.49 +/- 0.42 s, which is significantly (>5sigma) shorter than the previous measurements with XMM-Newton and RXTE. This implies that the system has gone through sudden spin-up episodes recently. The pulse profile shows a sharp eclipse-like feature with a modulation amplitude of >95%. The linear rise of the observed X-ray luminosity from <~2x to 7x10^35 erg s^-1 is correlated with steady softening of the X-ray spectrum, which can be described by the changes in the local absorption from N_H ~ 10^24 to <~10^20 cm^-2 for an absorbed power-law model. The soft X-ray emission below 2 keV was absent in the early part of the observation when only the pulsating hard X-ray component was observed, whereas at later times both soft and hard X-ray components were observed pulsating. A likely explanation is that the neutron star was initially hidden in the circumstellar disk of the companion, and later came out of the disk with the accreted material that continued fueling the observed pulsation.<br />Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1605.03672
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/826/1/4