Bibcode
Karpen, J. T.; Luna, M.; Knizhnik, Kalman J.; Muglach, Karin; Gilbert, Holly; Kucera, Therese A.; Uritsky, Vadim
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 566, id.A131, 14 pp.
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6
2014
Journal
Citations
14
Refereed citations
13
Description
Context. BD + 60° 73 is the optical counterpart of the X-ray source
IGR J00370+6122, a probable accretion-powered X-ray pulsar. The X-ray
light curve of this binary system shows clear periodicity at 15.7 d,
which has been interpreted as repeated outbursts around the periastron
of an eccentric orbit. Aims: We aim to characterise the binary
system IGR J00370+6122 by deriving its orbital and physical parameters.
Methods: We obtained high-resolution spectra of BD + 60° 73
at different epochs. We used the fastwind code to generate a stellar
atmosphere model to fit the observed spectrum and obtain physical
magnitudes. The synthetic spectrum was used as a template for
cross-correlation with the observed spectra to measure radial
velocities. The radial velocity curve provided an orbital solution for
the system. We also analysed the RXTE/ASM and Swift/BAT light curves to
confirm the stability of the periodicity. Results: BD + 60°
73 is a BN0.7 Ib low-luminosity supergiant located at a distance ~3.1
kpc, in the Cas OB4 association. We derive Teff = 24 000 K
and log gc = 3.0, and chemical abundances consistent with a
moderately high level of evolution. The spectroscopic and evolutionary
masses are consistent at the 1-σ level with a mass
M∗ ≈ 15 M⊙. The recurrence time of
the X-ray flares is the orbital period of the system. The neutron star
is in a high-eccentricity (e = 0.56 ± 0.07) orbit, and the X-ray
emission is strongly peaked around orbital phase φ = 0.2, though
the observations are consistent with some level of X-ray activity
happening at all orbital phases. Conclusions: The X-ray behaviour
of IGR J00370+6122 is reminiscent of "intermediate" supergiant X-ray
transients, though its peak luminosity is rather low. The orbit is
somewhat wider than those of classical persistent supergiant X-ray
binaries, which when combined with the low luminosity of the mass donor,
explains the low X-ray luminosity. IGR J00370+6122 will very likely
evolve towards a persistent supergiant system, highlighting the
evolutionary connection between different classes of wind-accreting
X-ray sources.
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