EXTraS discovery of two pulsators in the direction of the LMC a Be/X-ray binary pulsar in the LMC and a candidate double-degenerate polar in the foreground

Authors
  • F. Haberl
  • G.L. Israel
  • G.A. Rodriguez Castillo
  • G. Vasilopoulos
  • C. Delvaux
  • A. De Luca
  • S. Carpano
  • P. Esposito
  • G. Novara
  • R. Salvaterra
  • A. Tiengo
  • D. D'Agostino
  • A. Udalski
Publication date 2017
Journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
Article number A69
Volume | Issue number 598
Number of pages 10
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Context. The Exploring the X-ray Transient and variable Sky (EXTraS) project searches for coherent signals in the X-ray archival data of XMM-Newton.
Aims. XMM-Newton performed more than 400 pointed observations in the region of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We inspected the results of the EXTraS period search to systematically look for new X-ray pulsators in our neighbour galaxy.
Methods. We analysed the XMM-Newton observations of two sources from the 3XMM catalogue which show significant signals for coherent pulsations.
Results. 3XMM J051259.8-682640 was detected as a source with a hard X-ray spectrum in two XMM-Newton observations, revealing a periodic modulation of the X-ray flux with 956 s. As optical counterpart we identify an early-type star with Hα emission. The OGLE I-band light curve exhibits a regular pattern with three brightness dips which mark a period of ~1350 d. The X-ray spectrum of 3XMM J051034.6-670353 is dominated by a super-soft blackbody-like emission component (kT ~ 70 eV) which is modulated by nearly 100% with a period of ~1418 s. From GROND observations we suggest a star with r′ = 20.9 mag as a possible counterpart of the X-ray source.
Conclusions. 3XMM J051259.8-682640 is confirmed as a new Be/X-ray binary pulsar in the LMC. We discuss the long-term optical period as the likely orbital period which would be the longest known from a high-mass X-ray binary. The spectral and temporal properties of the super-soft source 3XMM J051034.6-670353 are very similar to those of RX J0806.3+1527 and RX J1914.4+2456 suggesting that it belongs to the class of double-degenerate polars and is located in our Galaxy rather than in the LMC.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629744
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017A%26A...598A..69H
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