Flares from a candidate Galactic magnetar suggest a missing link to dim isolated neutron stars

Authors
  • A.J. Castro-Tirado
  • A. de Ugarte Postigo
  • J. Gorosabel
  • M. Jelínek
  • T.A. Fatkhullin
  • V.V. Sokolov
  • P. Ferrero
  • D.A. Kann
  • S. Klose
  • D. Sluse
  • M. Bremer
  • J.M. Winters
  • D. Nuernberger
  • D. Pérez-Ramírez
  • M.A. Guerrero
  • J. French
  • G. Melady
  • L. Hanlon
  • B. McBreen
  • K. Leventis
  • S.B. Markoff
  • S. Leon
  • A. Kraus
  • F.J. Aceituno
  • R. Cunniffe
  • P. Kubánek
  • S. Vítek
  • S. Schulze
  • A.C. Wilson
  • R. Hudec
  • M. Durant
  • J.M. González-Pérez
  • T. Shahbaz
  • S. Guziy
  • S.B. Pandey
  • L. Pavlenko
  • E. Sonbas
  • S.A Trushkin
  • N.N. Bursov
  • N.A. Nizhelskij
  • C. Sánchez-Fernández
  • L. Sabau-Graziati
Publication date 2008
Journal Nature
Volume | Issue number 455 | 7212
Pages (from-to) 506-509
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Magnetars are young neutron stars with very strong magnetic fields of the order of 10(14)-10(15) G. They are detected in our Galaxy either as soft gamma-ray repeaters or anomalous X-ray pulsars. Soft gamma-ray repeaters are a rare type of gamma-ray transient sources that are occasionally detected as bursters in the high-energy sky. No optical counterpart to the gamma-ray flares or the quiescent source has yet been identified. Here we report multi-wavelength observations of a puzzling source, SWIFT J195509+261406. We detected more than 40 flaring episodes in the optical band over a time span of three days, and a faint infrared flare 11 days later, after which the source returned to quiescence. Our radio observations confirm a Galactic nature and establish a lower distance limit of similar to 3.7 kpc. We suggest that SWIFT J195509+261406 could be an isolated magnetar whose bursting activity has been detected at optical wavelengths, and for which the long- term X- ray emission is short- lived. In this case, a new manifestation of magnetar activity has been recorded and we can consider SWIFT J195509+261406 to be a link between the 'persistent' soft gamma-ray repeaters/anomalous X- ray pulsars and dim isolated neutron stars.
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/nature07328
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