TY - JOUR
T1 - X-Ray and Radio Monitoring of the Neutron Star Low-mass X-Ray Binary 1A 1744-361
T2 - Quasiperiodic Oscillations, Transient Ejections, and a Disk Atmosphere
AU - Ng, Mason
AU - Hughes, Andrew K.
AU - Homan, Jeroen
AU - Miller, Jon M.
AU - Pike, Sean N.
AU - Altamirano, Diego
AU - Bult, Peter
AU - Chakrabarty, Deepto
AU - Buisson, D. J.K.
AU - Coughenour, Benjamin M.
AU - Fender, Rob
AU - Guillot, Sebastien
AU - Güver, Tolga
AU - Jaisawal, Gaurava K.
AU - Jaodand, Amruta D.
AU - Malacaria, Christian
AU - Miller-Jones, James C.A.
AU - Sanna, Andrea
AU - Sivakoff, Gregory R.
AU - Strohmayer, Tod E.
AU - Tomsick, John A.
AU - van den Eijnden, Jakob
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - We report on X-ray (NICER/NuSTAR/MAXI/Swift) and radio (MeerKAT) timing and spectroscopic analysis from a 3 month monitoring campaign in 2022 of a high-intensity outburst of the dipping neutron star low-mass X-ray binary 1A 1744−361. The 0.5-6.8 keV NICER X-ray hardness-intensity and color-color diagrams of the observations throughout the outburst suggest that 1A 1744−361 spent most of its outburst in an atoll-state, but we show that the source exhibited Z-state-like properties at the peak of the outburst, similar to a small sample of other atoll-state sources. A timing analysis with NICER data revealed several instances of an ≈8 Hz quasiperiodic oscillation (QPO; fractional rms amplitudes of ∼5%) around the peak of the outburst, the first from this source, which we connect to the normal branch QPOs seen in the Z-state. Our observations of 1A 1744−361 are fully consistent with the idea of the mass accretion rate being the main distinguishing parameter between atoll- and Z-states. Radio monitoring data by MeerKAT suggests that the source was at its radio-brightest during the outburst peak, and that the source transitioned from the “island” spectral state to the “banana” state within ∼3 days of the outburst onset, launching transient jet ejecta. The observations present the strongest evidence for radio flaring, including jet ejecta, during the island-to-banana spectral state transition at low accretion rates (atoll-state). The source also exhibited Fe xxv, Fe xxvi Kα, and Kβ X-ray absorption lines, whose origins likely lie in an accretion disk atmosphere.
AB - We report on X-ray (NICER/NuSTAR/MAXI/Swift) and radio (MeerKAT) timing and spectroscopic analysis from a 3 month monitoring campaign in 2022 of a high-intensity outburst of the dipping neutron star low-mass X-ray binary 1A 1744−361. The 0.5-6.8 keV NICER X-ray hardness-intensity and color-color diagrams of the observations throughout the outburst suggest that 1A 1744−361 spent most of its outburst in an atoll-state, but we show that the source exhibited Z-state-like properties at the peak of the outburst, similar to a small sample of other atoll-state sources. A timing analysis with NICER data revealed several instances of an ≈8 Hz quasiperiodic oscillation (QPO; fractional rms amplitudes of ∼5%) around the peak of the outburst, the first from this source, which we connect to the normal branch QPOs seen in the Z-state. Our observations of 1A 1744−361 are fully consistent with the idea of the mass accretion rate being the main distinguishing parameter between atoll- and Z-states. Radio monitoring data by MeerKAT suggests that the source was at its radio-brightest during the outburst peak, and that the source transitioned from the “island” spectral state to the “banana” state within ∼3 days of the outburst onset, launching transient jet ejecta. The observations present the strongest evidence for radio flaring, including jet ejecta, during the island-to-banana spectral state transition at low accretion rates (atoll-state). The source also exhibited Fe xxv, Fe xxvi Kα, and Kβ X-ray absorption lines, whose origins likely lie in an accretion disk atmosphere.
KW - High energy astrophysics
KW - Transient sources
KW - Low-mass x-ray binary stars
KW - Neutron stars
KW - Pulsars
KW - Accretion
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ad35bd
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ad35bd
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85193066152
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 966
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 232
ER -