SIMBAD references

2014MNRAS.441.1825B - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 441, 1825-1830 (2014/June-3)

A state change in the low-mass X-ray binary XSS J12270-4859.

BASSA C.G., PATRUNO A., HESSELS J.W.T., KEANE E.F., MONARD B., MAHONY E.K., BOGDANOV S., CORBEL S., EDWARDS P.G., ARCHIBALD A.M., JANSSEN G.H., STAPPERS B.W. and TENDULKAR S.

Abstract (from CDS):

Millisecond radio pulsars acquire their rapid rotation rates through mass and angular momentum transfer in a low-mass X-ray binary system. Recent studies of PSR J1824-2452I and PSR J1023+0038 have observationally demonstrated this link, and they have also shown that such systems can repeatedly transition back-and-forth between the radio millisecond pulsar and low-mass X-ray binary states. This also suggests that a fraction of such systems are not newly born radio millisecond pulsars but are rather suspended in a back-and-forth, state-switching phase, perhaps for gigayears. XSS J12270-4859 has been previously suggested to be a low-mass X-ray binary, and until recently the only such system to be seen at MeV-GeV energies. We present radio, optical and X-ray observations that offer compelling evidence that XSS J12270-4859 is a low-mass X-ray binary which transitioned to a radio millisecond pulsar state between 2012 November 14 and December 21. We use optical and X-ray photometry/spectroscopy to show that the system has undergone a sudden dimming and no longer shows evidence for an accretion disc. The optical observations constrain the orbital period to 6.913±0.002 h.

Abstract Copyright: © 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2014)

Journal keyword(s): binaries: general - stars: individual: XSS J12270-4859 - stars: neutron - X-rays: binaries

Simbad objects: 11

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