NuSTAR Discovery of a 3.76 s Transient Magnetar Near Sagittarius A*
- Creators
- Mori, Kaya
- Gotthelf, Eric V.
- Zhang, Shou
- An, Hongjun
- Baganoff, Frederick K.
- Barrière, Nicolas M.
- Beloborodov, Andrei M.
- Boggs, Steven E.
- Christensen, Finn E.
- Craig, William W.
- Dufour, Francois
- Grefenstette, Brian W.
- Hailey, Charles J.
- Harrison, Fiona A.
- Hong, Jaesub
- Kaspi, Victoria M.
- Kennea, Jamie A.
- Madsen, Kristin K.
- Markwardt, Craig B.
- Nynka, Melania
- Stern, Daniel
- Tomsick, John A.
- Zhang, William W.
Abstract
We report the discovery of 3.76 s pulsations from a new burst source near Sgr A^* observed by the NuSTAR observatory. The strong signal from SGR J1745–29 presents a complex pulse profile modulated with pulsed fraction 27% ± 3% in the 3-10 keV band. Two observations spaced nine days apart yield a spin-down rate of Ṗ =(6.5 ± 1.4) × 10^(–12). This implies a magnetic field B = 1.6 × 10^(14) G, spin-down power Ė =5 × 10^(33) erg s^(–1), and characteristic age P/2Ṗ =9 × 10^3 yr for the rotating dipole model. However, the current Ṗ may be erratic, especially during outburst. The flux and modulation remained steady during the observations and the 3-79 keV spectrum is well fitted by a combined blackbody plus power-law model with temperature kT_(BB) = 0.96 ± 0.02 keV and photon index Γ = 1.5 ± 0.4. The neutral hydrogen column density (N_H ~ 1.4 × 10^(23) cm^(–2)) measured by NuSTAR and Swift suggests that SGR J1745–29 is located at or near the Galactic center. The lack of an X-ray counterpart in the published Chandra survey catalog sets a quiescent 2-8 keV luminosity limit of L_x ≾ 10^(32) erg s^(–1). The bursting, timing, and spectral properties indicate a transient magnetar undergoing an outburst with 2-79 keV luminosity up to 3.5 × 10^(35) erg s^(–1) for a distance of 8 kpc. SGR J1745–29 joins a growing subclass of transient magnetars, indicating that many magnetars in quiescence remain undetected in the X-ray band or have been detected as high-B radio pulsars. The peculiar location of SGR J1745–29 has important implications for the formation and dynamics of neutron stars in the Galactic center region.
Additional Information
© 2013 American Astronomical Society. Received 2013 May 7; accepted 2013 May 14; published 2013 May 30. This work was supported under NASA Contract No. NNG08FD60C, and made use of data from the NuSTAR mission, a project led by the California Institute of Technology, managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The authors thank Arash Bodaghee and Clio Sleator for their assistance with data analysis and Brian Metzger for helpful discussions.Attached Files
Published - 2041-8205_770_2_L23.pdf
Submitted - 1305.1945v2.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:5ef3b3dffd30823fdab17bcb1055f448
|
289.2 kB | Preview Download |
md5:a0b6bd6974f6b8ec7b5f969114c19b08
|
326.7 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- Alternative title
- NuSTAR discovery of a 3.76-second transient magnetar near Sagittarius A*
- Eprint ID
- 39856
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20130812-081440101
- NASA
- NNG08FD60C
- NASA/JPL/Caltech
- Created
-
2013-08-12Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- NuSTAR, Space Radiation Laboratory