Prolonged sub-luminous state of the new transitional pulsar candidate CXOU J110926.4−650224

Author:

Coti Zelati FrancescoORCID,Papitto AlessandroORCID,de Martino Domitilla,Buckley David A. H.,Odendaal Alida,Li Jian,Russell Thomas D.,Torres Diego F.,Mazzola Simona M.,Bozzo Enrico,Gromadzki MariuszORCID,Campana Sergio,Rea Nanda,Ferrigno Carlo,Migliari Simone

Abstract

We report on a multi-wavelength study of the unclassified X-ray source CXOU J110926.4−650224 (J1109). We identified the optical counterpart as a blue star with a magnitude of ∼20.1 (3300–10500 Å). The optical emission was variable on timescales from hundreds to thousands of seconds. The spectrum showed prominent emission lines with variable profiles at different epochs. Simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations revealed a bimodal distribution of the X-ray count rates on timescales as short as tens of seconds, as well as sporadic flaring activity. The average broad-band (0.3–79 keV) spectrum was adequately described by an absorbed power law model with photon index of Γ = 1.63  ±  0.01 (at 1σ c.l.), and the X-ray luminosity was (2.16  ±  0.04)  ×  1034 erg s−1 for a distance of 4 kpc. Based on observations with different instruments, the X-ray luminosity has remained relatively steady over the past ∼15 years. J1109 is spatially associated with the gamma-ray source FL8Y J1109.8−6500, which was detected with Fermi at an average luminosity of (1.5  ±  0.2)  ×  1034 erg s−1 (assuming the distance of J1109) over the 0.1–300 GeV energy band between 2008 and 2016. The source was undetected during ATCA radio observations that were simultaneous with NuSTAR, down to a 3σ flux upper limit of 18 μJy beam−1 (at 7.25 GHz). We show that the phenomenological properties of J1109 point to a binary transitional pulsar candidate currently in a sub-luminous accretion disk state, and that the upper limits derived for the radio emission are consistent with the expected radio luminosity for accreting neutron stars at similar X-ray luminosities.

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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