The Peculiar X-Ray Transient IGR J16358-4726
Author(s) -
S. Patel,
C. Kouveliotou,
Allyn F. Tennant,
Peter Woods,
A. R. King,
Mark H. Finger,
P. Ubertini,
Christoph Winkler,
T. J. L. Courvoisier,
M. van der Klis,
Stefanie Wachter,
B. M. Gaensler,
Chris Phillips
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the astrophysical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.376
H-Index - 489
eISSN - 1538-4357
pISSN - 0004-637X
DOI - 10.1086/382210
Subject(s) - neutron star , astrophysics , pulsar , physics , luminosity , x ray transient , flux (metallurgy) , orbital period , observatory , x ray binary , period (music) , astronomy , transient (computer programming) , galaxy , stars , chemistry , organic chemistry , acoustics , computer science , operating system
The new transient IGR 16358-4726 was discovered on 2003 March 19 with INTEGRAL. We detected the source serendipitously during our 2003 March 24 observation of SGR 1627-41 with the Chandra X-ray Observatory at the 1.7 x 10^{-10} ergs s^{-1} cm^{-2} flux level (2-10 keV) with a very high absorption column (N_H=3.3(1) x 10^{23} cm^{-2}) and a hard power law spectrum of index 0.5(1). We discovered a very strong flux modulation with a period of 5880(50) s and peak-to-peak pulse fraction of 70(6)% (2-10 keV), clearly visible in the x-ray data. The nature of IGR 16358-4726 remains unresolved. The only neutron star systems known with similar spin periods are low luminosity persistent wind-fed pulsars; if this is a spin period, this transient is a new kind of object. If this is an orbital period, then the system could be a compact Low Mass X-ray Binary (LMXB).
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