The peculiar X-ray transient IGR J16358-4726

Authors
  • S.K. Patel
  • C. Kouveliotou
  • A. Tennant
  • P.M. Woods
  • A. King
  • M.H. Finger
  • P. Ubertini
  • C. Winkler
  • T.J.L. Courvoisier
  • M. van der Klis
  • S. Wachter
  • B.M. Gaensler
  • C.J. Philips
Publication date 2004
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Volume | Issue number 602 | 1
Pages (from-to) L45-L48
Number of pages 4
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
The new transient IGR J16358-4726 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 × 10-10 ergs s-1 cm-2 flux level (2-10 keV) with a very high absorption column (NH = 3.3 × 1023 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 J16358-4726 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.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1086/382210
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