Discovery of the Accretion-powered Millisecond Pulsar SWIFT J1756.9–2508 with a Low-Mass Companion
/ Authors
H. Krimm, C. Markwardt, C. Deloye, P. Romano, D. Chakrabarty, S. Campana, J. Cummings, D. Galloway, N. Gehrels, J. Hartman
and 3 more authors
/ Abstract
We report on the discovery by the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer of the eighth known transient accretion-powered millisecond pulsar, SWIFT J1756.9-2508, as part of routine observations with the Swift Burst Alert Telescope hard X-ray transient monitor. The pulsar was subsequently observed by both the X-Ray Telescope on Swift and the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer Proportional Counter Array. It has a spin frequency of 182 Hz (5.5 ms) and an orbital period of 54.7 minutes. The minimum companion mass is between 0.0067 and 0.0086 M☉, depending on the mass of the neutron star, and the upper limit on the mass is 0.030 M☉ (95% confidence level). Such a low mass is inconsistent with brown dwarf models, and comparison with white dwarf models suggests that the companion is a He-dominated donor whose thermal cooling has been at least modestly slowed by irradiation from the accretion flux. No X-ray bursts, dips, eclipses, or quasi-periodic oscillations were detected. The current outburst lasted ≈13 days, and no earlier outbursts were found in archival data.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal Letters
DOI: 10.1086/522959