Tuesday, April 23, 2013

1304.6022 (R. Sturm et al.)

Long-term evolution of the neutron-star spin period of SXP 1062    [PDF]

R. Sturm, F. Haberl, L. M. Oskinova, M. P. E. Schurch, V. Hénault-Brunet, J. S. Gallagher III, A. Udalski
The Be/X-ray binary SXP 1062 is of especial interest owing to the large spin period of the neutron star, its large spin-down rate, and the correlation with a supernova remnant constraining its age. This makes the source an important probe for accretion physics. To investigate the long-term evolution of the spin period and associated spectral variations, we performed an XMM-Newton target-of-opportunity observation of SXP 1062 during X-ray outburst. Spectral and timing analysis of the XMM-Newton data was compared with previous studies, as well as complementary Swift/XRT monitoring and optical spectroscopy with the SALT telescope. The spin period was measured to be P=(1071.01+-0.16) s on 2012 Oct 14. The X-ray spectrum is similar to that of previous observations. No convincing cyclotron absorption features are found, constraining the magnetic field of the neutron star. The high-resolution RGS spectra indicate the presence of emission lines, which may not completely be accounted for by the SNR emission. The comparison of multi-epoch optical spectra suggest an increasing size or density of the decretion disc around the Be star. SXP 1062 showed a net spin-down with an average of (2.27+-0.44) s/yr over a baseline of 915 days.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.6022

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