The variable radio jet of the accreting neutron star the Rapid Burster

Author:

van den Eijnden J1ORCID,Robins D1,Sharma R1,Sánchez-Fernández C2,Russell T D3ORCID,Degenaar N4ORCID,Miller-Jones J C A5ORCID,Maccarone T6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Warwick , Coventry CV4 7AL , UK

2. Science Operations Department, European Space Astronomy Centre (ESA/ESAC , Madrid , Spain

3. INAF, Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica , Via U. La Malfa 153, I-90146 Palermo , Italy

4. Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy, University of Amsterdam , Science Park 904, 1098 XH, Amsterdam , the Netherlands

5. International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University , Perth, Western Australia , Australia

6. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas Tech University , Lubbock, TX , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The Rapid Burster is a unique neutron star low-mass X-ray binary system, showing both thermonuclear v-I and accretion-driven Type-II X-ray bursts. Recent studies have demonstrated how coordinated observations of X-ray and radio variability can constrain jet properties of accreting neutron stars – particularly when the X-ray variability is dominated by discrete changes. We present a simultaneous very large array, Swift, and INTErnational Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory observing campaign of the Rapid Burster to investigate whether its jet responds to Type-II bursts. We observe the radio counterpart of the X-ray binary at its faintest-detected radio luminosity, while the X-ray observations reveal prolific, fast X-ray bursting. A time-resolved analysis reveals that the radio counterpart varies significantly between observing scans, displaying a fractional variability of $38 \pm 5$ per cent. The radio faintness of the system prevents the robust identification of a causal relation between individual Type-II bursts and the evolution of the radio jet. However, based on a comparison of its low-radio luminosity with archival Rapid Burster observations and other accreting neutron stars, and on a qualitative assessment of the X-ray and radio light curves, we explore the presence of a tentative connection between bursts and jet: i.e. the Type-II bursts may weaken or strengthen the jet. The former of those two scenarios would fit with magnetorotational jet models; we discuss three lines of future research to establish this potential relation between Type-II bursts and jets more confidently.

Funder

NASA

ESA

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference94 articles.

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4. Bahramian A., Rushton A., 2022, bersavosh/XRB-LrLx_pub: update 20220908, Version v22090810.5281/zenodo.7059313

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