Bibcode
Shahbaz, T.; Dallilar, Y.; Garner, A.; Eikenberry, S.; Veledina, A.; Gandhi, P.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 477, Issue 1, p.566-577
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6
2018
Citations
18
Refereed citations
15
Description
We present simultaneous optical and near-infrared (IR) photometry of the
millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038 during its low-mass X-ray binary
phase. The r΄- and Ks-band light curves show
rectangular, flat-bottomed dips, similar to the X-ray mode-switching
(active-passive state transitions) behaviour observed previously. The
cross-correlation function (CCF) of the optical and near-IR data reveals
a strong, broad negative anticorrelation at negative lags, a broad
positive correlation at positive lags, with a strong, positive narrow
correlation superimposed. The shape of the CCF resembles the CCF of
black hole X-ray binaries but the time-scales are different. The
features can be explained by reprocessing and a hot accretion flow close
to the neutron star's magnetospheric radius. The optical emission is
dominated by the reprocessed component, whereas the near-IR emission
contains the emission from plasmoids in the hot accretion flow and a
reprocessed component. The rapid active-passive state transition occurs
when the hot accretion flow material is channelled on to the neutron
star and is expelled from its magnetosphere. During the transition the
optical reprocessing component decreases resulting in the removal of a
blue spectral component. The accretion of clumpy material through the
magnetic barrier of the neutron star produces the observed
near-IR/optical CCF and variability. The dip at negative lags
corresponds to the suppression of the near-IR synchrotron component in
the hot flow, whereas the broad positive correlation at positive lags is
driven by the increased synchrotron emission of the outflowing
plasmoids. The narrow peak in the CCF is due to the delayed reprocessed
component, enhanced by the increased X-ray emission.
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