Bibcode
Pooley, David; Bogdanov, Slavko; Homan, Jeroen; Altamirano, Diego; Patruno, Alessandro; Wijnands, Rudy; Heinke, Craig; Bahramian, Arash; Linares, M.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 438, Issue 1, p.251-261
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2
2014
Citations
80
Refereed citations
72
Description
The X-ray transient IGR J18245-2452 in the globular cluster M28 contains
the first neutron star (NS) seen to switch between rotation-powered and
accretion-powered pulsations. We analyse its 2013 March-April 25 d long
outburst as observed by Swift, which had a peak bolometric luminosity of
˜6 per cent of the Eddington limit (LEdd), and give
detailed properties of the thermonuclear burst observed on 2013 April 7.
We also present a detailed analysis of new and archival Chandra data,
which we use to study quiescent emission from IGR J18245-2452 between
2002 and 2013. Together, these observations cover almost five orders of
magnitude in X-ray luminosity (LX, 0.5-10 keV). The Swift
spectrum softens during the outburst decay (photon index Γ from
1.3 above LX/LEdd = 10-2 to ˜2.5
at LX/LEdd = 10-4), similar to other NS
and black hole transients. At even lower luminosities,
LX/LEdd = [10-4-10-6], deep
Chandra observations reveal hard (Γ = 1-1.5), purely non-thermal
and highly variable X-ray emission in quiescence. We therefore find
evidence for a spectral transition at LX/LEdd
˜ 10-4, where the X-ray spectral softening observed
during the outburst decline turns into hardening as the source goes to
quiescence. Furthermore, we find a striking variability pattern in the
2008 Chandra light curves: rapid switches between a high-luminosity
`active' state (LX ≃ 3.9 × 1033 erg
s-1) and a low-luminosity `passive' state (LX
≃ 5.6 × 1032 erg s-1), with no
detectable spectral change. We put our results in the context of
low-luminosity accretion flows around compact objects and X-ray emission
from millisecond radio pulsars. Finally, we discuss possible origins for
the observed mode switches in quiescence, and explore a scenario where
they are caused by fast transitions between the magnetospheric accretion
and pulsar wind shock emission regimes.
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Accreting black-holes and neutron stars in X-ray binaries provide an ideal laboratory for exploring the physics of compact objects, yielding not only confirmation of the existence of stellar mass black holes via dynamical mass measurements, but also the best opportunity for probing high-gravity environments and the physics of accretion; the most
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