Discovery and Identification of MAXI J1621-501 as a Type I X-Ray Burster with a Super-orbital Period

Open Access
Authors
  • E. Bozzo
  • S. Guiriec
  • P. Bult
  • D. Huppenkothen
  • E. Göğüş
  • A. Bahramian
  • J. Kennea
  • J.D. Linford
  • J. Miller-Jones
  • M.G. Baring
  • P. Beniamini
  • D. Chakrabarty
  • J. Granot
  • C. Hailey
  • F.A. Harrison
  • D.H. Hartmann
  • W. Iwakiri
  • L. Kaper
  • E. Kara
  • S. Mazzola
  • K. Murata
  • Daniel Stern
  • J.A. Tomsick
  • A.J. van der Horst
  • G.A. Younes
Publication date 20-10-2019
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 168
Volume | Issue number 884 | 2
Number of pages 19
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
MAXI J1621–501 is the first Swift/XRT Deep Galactic Plane Survey transient that was followed up with a multitude of space missions (NuSTAR, Swift, Chandra, NICER, INTEGRAL, and MAXI) and ground-based observatories (Gemini, IRSF, and ATCA). The source was discovered with MAXI on 2017 October 19 as a new, unidentified transient. Further observations with NuSTAR revealed two Type I X-ray bursts, identifying MAXI J1621–501 as a low mass x-ray binary with a neutron star primary. Overall, 24 Type I bursts were detected from the source during a 15 month period. At energies below 10 keV, the source spectrum was best fit with three components: an absorbed blackbody with kT = 2.3 keV, a cutoff power law with index Γ = 0.7, and an emission line centered on 6.3 keV. Timing analysis of the X-ray persistent emission and burst data has not revealed coherent pulsations from the source or an orbital period. We identified, however, a super-orbital period ~78 days in the source X-ray light curve. This period agrees very well with the theoretically predicted radiative precession period of ~82 days. Thus, MAXI J1621–501 joins a small group of sources characterized with super-orbital periods.
Document type Article
Note © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab3e43
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2019ApJ...884..168G/abstract
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