The INTEGRAL view of the pulsating hard X-ray sky: from accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars to rotation-powered pulsars and magnetars
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| Publication date | 12-2020 |
| Journal | New Astronomy Reviews |
| Article number | 101544 |
| Volume | Issue number | 91 |
| Number of pages | 26 |
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| Abstract |
In the last 25 years a new generation of X-ray satellites imparted a
significant leap forward in our knowledge of X-ray pulsars. The
discovery of accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars proved that
disk accretion can spin up a neutron star to a very high rotation speed.
The detection of MeV-GeV pulsed emission from a few hundreds of
rotation-powered pulsars probed particle acceleration in the outer
magnetosphere, or even beyond. Also, a population of two dozens of
magnetars has emerged. INTEGRAL played a central role to achieve these
results by providing instruments with high temporal resolution up to the
hard X-ray/soft, γ-ray band and a large field of view imager with
good angular resolution to spot hard X-ray transients. In this article
we review the main contributions by INTEGRAL to our understanding of the
pulsating hard X-ray sky, such as the discovery and characterization of
several accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars, the generation
of the first catalog of hard X-ray/soft γ-ray rotation-powered
pulsars, the detection of polarization in the hard X-ray emission from
the Crab pulsar, and the discovery of persistent hard X-ray emission
from several magnetars.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newar.2020.101544 |
| Other links | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020NewAR..9101544P/abstract |
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