Radio observations of the 33.8 ms X-ray pulsar SAX J0635+0533

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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4 pages, LaTeX, 1 PS figure, accepted for publication on A&A

Scientific paper

The hard X-ray source SAX J0635+0533 shows pulsations at a period of 33.8 ms and is thought to be associated with a bright Be star. We here report on radio observations towards this source with the VLA and Arecibo radiotelescopes. With the VLA we do not detect any radio flux at the Be-star position, but one 4.7 mJy (at a radio frequency of 1.4 GHz) source lies just on the border of the 30'' X-ray error circle. Periodicity searches at 430 MHz performed with the Arecibo telescope failed to detect any pulsation. We argue that the 4.7 mJy source is not the radio counterpart of SAX J0635+0533. Most likely SAX J0635+0533 is a rather ``non-standard'' Be-star/neutron-star X-ray binary pulsar, probably with a relatively short orbital period. It could still be a radio emitting pulsar but with an emission beam not pointing toward the Earth.

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