Unexpected late-time temperature increase observed in the two neutron star crust-cooling sources XTE J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676
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| Publication date | 06-2020 |
| Journal | Astronomy & Astrophysics |
| Article number | L2 |
| Volume | Issue number | 638 |
| Number of pages | 5 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
Transient low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) that host neutron stars (NSs)
provide excellent laboratories for probing the dense matter physics
present in NS crusts. During accretion outbursts in LMXBs, exothermic
reactions may heat the NS crust, disrupting the crust-core equilibrium.
When the outburst ceases, the crust cools to restore thermal equilibrium
with the core. Monitoring this cooling evolution allows us to probe the
dense matter physics in the crust. Properties of the deeper crustal
layers can be probed at later times after the end of the outburst. We
report on the unexpected late-time temperature evolution (≳2000
days after the end of their outbursts) of two NSs in LMXBs, XTE
J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676. Although both these sources exhibited very
different outbursts (in terms of duration and the average accretion
rate), they exhibit an unusually steep decay of ∼7 eV in the
observed effective temperature (occurring in a time span of ∼700
days) around ∼2000 days after the end of their outbursts.
Furthermore, they both showed an even more unexpected rise of ∼3 eV
in temperature (over a time period of ∼500-2000 days) after this
steep decay. This rise was significant at the 2.4σ and 8.5σ
level for XTE J1701-462 and EXO 0748-676, respectively. The physical
explanation for such behaviour is unknown and cannot be
straightforwardly be explained within the cooling hypothesis. In
addition, this observed evolution cannot be well explained by low-level
accretion either without invoking many assumptions. We investigate the
potential pathways in the theoretical heating and cooling models that
could reproduce this unusual behaviour, which so far has been observed
in two crust-cooling sources. Such a temperature increase has not been
observed in the other NS crust-cooling sources at similarly late times,
although it cannot be excluded that this might be a result of the
inadequate sampling obtained at such late times.
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| Document type | Comment/Letter to the editor |
| Note | © ESO 2020 |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202038198 |
| Other links | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020A%26A...638L...2P/abstract |
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Unexpected late-time temperature increase observed in the two neutron star
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