An accreting pulsar with extreme properties drives an ultraluminous x-ray source in NGC 5907

Authors
  • P. Casella
  • A. De Luca
  • M. Marelli
  • A. Papitto
  • M. Perri
  • S. Puccetti
  • G.A. Rodriguez Castillo
  • D. Salvetti
  • A. Tiengo
  • L. Zampieri
  • D. D'Agostino
  • J. Greiner
  • F. Haberl
  • G. Novara
  • R. Salvaterra
  • R. Turolla
  • M. Watson
  • J. Wilms
  • A. Wolter
Publication date 01-02-2017
Journal Science
Volume | Issue number 355 | 6327
Pages (from-to) 817-819
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Ultraluminous x-ray sources (ULXs) in nearby galaxies shine brighter than any x-ray source in our Galaxy. ULXs are usually modeled as stellar-mass black holes (BHs) accreting at very high rates or intermediate-mass BHs. We present observations showing that NGC 5907 ULX is instead an x-ray accreting neutron star (NS) with a spin period evolving from 1.43 seconds in 2003 to 1.13 seconds in 2014. It has an isotropic peak luminosity of ~1000 times the Eddington limit for a NS at 17.1 megaparsec. Standard accretion models fail to explain its luminosity, even assuming beamed emission, but a strong multipolar magnetic field can describe its properties. These findings suggest that other extreme ULXs (x-ray luminosity ≥ 1041 erg second-1) might harbor NSs.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aai8635
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017Sci...355..817I
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