Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2002-06-27
Astrophys.J. 576 (2002) L137-L140
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
5 pages, 3 figures; accepted by ApJ Letters. Revised distance lower limit and added a figure showing pulse profiles
Scientific paper
10.1086/343841
We have identified the third known accretion-powered millisecond pulsar, XTE J0929-314, with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer. The source is a faint, high-Galactic-latitude X-ray transient (d >~ 5 kpc) that was in outburst during 2002 April-June. The 185 Hz (5.4 ms) pulsation had a fractional rms amplitude of 3-7% and was generally broad and sinusoidal, although occasionally double-peaked. The hard X-ray pulses arrived up to 770 microseconds earlier than the soft X-ray pulses. The pulsar was spinning down at an average rate of -(9.2 +/- 0.4) * 10^-14 Hz/s; the spin-down torque may arise from magnetic coupling to the accretion disk, a magnetohydrodynamic wind, or gravitational radiation from the rapidly spinning pulsar. The pulsations were modulated by a 43.6 min ultracompact binary orbit, yielding the smallest measured mass function (2.7 * 10^-7 M_sun) of any stellar binary. The binary parameters imply an approximately 0.01 M_sun white dwarf donor and a moderately high inclination. We note that all three known accreting millisecond pulsars are X-ray transients in very close binaries with extremely low mass transfer rates. This is an important clue to the physics governing whether or not persistent millisecond pulsations are detected in low-mass X-ray binaries.
Chakrabarty Deepto
Galloway Duncan
Morgan Edward
Remillard Ronald
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