Timing and spectroscopy of accreting X-ray pulsars: the state of cyclotron line studies
/ Authors
/ Abstract
A great deal of emphasis on timing in the RXTE era has been on pushing toward higher and higher frequency phenomena, particularly kHz QPOs. However, the large areas of the RXTE pointed instruments provide another capability which is key for the understanding of accreting X‐ray pulsars — the ability to accumulate high quality spectra in a limited observing time. For the accreting X‐ray pulsars, with their relatively modest spin frequencies, this translates into an ability to study broad band spectra as a function of pulse phase. This is a critical tool, as pulsar spectra are strong functions of the geometry of the “accretion mound” and the observers’ viewing angle to the ∼1012 G magnetic field. In particular, the appearance of “cyclotron lines” is sensitively dependent on the viewing geometry, which must change with the rotation of the star. These spectral features, seen in only a handful of objects, are quite important, as they give us our only direct measure of neutron star magnetic fields. Furthermore, ...
Journal: arXiv: Astrophysics
DOI: 10.1063/1.1781049