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SRG/ART-XC discovery of SRGA J204318.2+443815: Towards the complete population of faint X-ray pulsars

MPG-Autoren
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Gilfanov,  M. R.
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Sunyaev,  R. A.
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Zitation

Lutovinov, A. A., Tsygankov, S. S., Mereminskiy, I. A., Molkov, S. V., Semena, A. N., Arefiev, V. A., et al. (2022). SRG/ART-XC discovery of SRGA J204318.2+443815: Towards the complete population of faint X-ray pulsars. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 661: A28. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202141630.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000B-581C-4
Zusammenfassung
We report the discovery of the new long-period X-ray pulsar SRGA J204318.2+443815/SRGe J204319.0+443820 in a Be binary system. The source was found in the second all-sky survey by the Mikhail Pavlinsky ART-XC telescope on board the SRG mission. The follow-up observations with XMM-Newton, NICER, and NuSTAR allowed us to discover a strong coherent signal in the source light curve with a period of ~742 s. The pulsed fraction was found to depend on an increase in energy from ~20% in soft X-rays to >50% at high energies, as is typical for X-ray pulsars. The source has a quite hard spectrum with an exponential cutoff at high energies and a bolometric luminosity of LX ≃ 4 × 1035 ergs-1. The X-ray position of the source is found to be consistent with the optical transient ZTF18abjpmzf, located at a distance of ~8.0 kpc. Dedicated optical and infrared observations with the RTT-150, NOT, Keck, and Palomar telescopes revealed a number of emission lines (Ha, He I, and the Paschen and Braket series) with a strongly absorbed continuum. According to the SRG scans and archival XMM-Newton data, the source flux is moderately variable (by a factor of 4-10) on timescales of several months and years. All this suggests that SRGA J204318.2+443815/SRGe J204319.0+443820 is a new quasi-persistent low-luminosity X-ray pulsar in a distant binary system with a Be-star of the B0-B2e class. Thus the SRG observatory allowed us to unveil a hidden population of faint objects, including a population of slowly rotating X-ray pulsars in Be systems.